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Cell Injury
Path - Fundamentals
16
Medical
Graduate
08/22/2012

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Cards

Term
Necrosis features
Definition
Cell lysis w/ necrotic debris, immune activation, cell enlarge, nuclear karyolysis, plasma membrane disrupted, cellular contents leak, increased eosinophilia due to loss of RNA and ribosomes, and scarring.
Term
Apoptosis features
Definition
Cell intact w/ little immune activation, cell shrinks, nuclear pyknosis into DNA fragments of 180 bp (nucleosome size), plasma membrane intact and forms apoptotic bodies, clearance by phagocytes.
Term
Senescence features
Definition
Irreversible cell arrest mediated by p53, occurs in response to telomere erosion, oncogene activation, damage; induces release of cytokines that attract NK cells for clearance. Senescent burden increases with age and tumors.
Term
Cloudy swelling/hydropic degeneration/vacuolar degeneration
Definition
Earliest evidence of cellular injury is loss of normal staining intensity. Due to loss of ribosomal RNA, faint blue tint is lost and swelling of organelles with water dilutes color of cell. As more water builds up true vacuoles appear in the cell.
Term
Fatty change
Definition
Seen in certain cells with high energy demands (hepatocyte, myocardial cell, kidney), impaired metabolism of triglycerides causes build up of fat vacuoles that push aside the nucleus. Frozen sections can preserve the fat, which can be stained (Oil red O, Sudan black, etc.)
Term
Pyknosis
Definition
Condensation of nucleus with intense basophilia.
Term
Karyorrhexis
Definition
Pyknotic nuclei degenerate further and fragment into several particles of degenerate nuclear material.
Term
Karyolysis
Definition
Cellular hydrolytic enzymes completely breakdown nuclear fragments leading to loss of basophilia. Cell is left as an anucleate mass.
Term
Coagulative necrosis
Definition
Architecture of the dead tissue is preserved, cells may be preserved for days or weeks due to breakdown of lytic enzymes until immigrant leukocytes can access the area.
Term
Liquefactive necrosis
Definition
No retention of original structure with autolysis. Happens in the CNS (few extracellular structural elements to preserve architecture) and with pyogenic bacterial infections.
Term
Caseous necrosis
Definition
Combines features of two major necrotic patterns, amorphous mass of partially preserved cellular debris surrounded by a granulomatous inflammatory wall.
Term
Fibrinoid necrosis
Definition
Necrosis usually seen around blood vessels that involves deposition of immune complexes and fibrin with proteinaceous mass.
Term
Hypoxic injury
Definition
Decreased metabolism and protein synthesis. Ion pumps become less effective, eventually causing vacuolar degeneration. Buildup of lactic acid (decreased pH) can cause chromatin clumping.
Term
Reperfusion injury
Definition
Radicals formed during ischemia now accumulate due to sudden increase in oxygen. Xanthine oxidase produces ROS as byproducts with uric acid. iNOS turned on during ischemia, resultant NO can react with oxygen upon reperfusion.
Term
Proteasome degradation
Definition
Ubiquitin (or ubiquitin-like molecules) signal for degradation. E3 ligase (many types, specific) bring E2 conjugating enzyme (fewer) and E1 Ub activating enzyme (10 isoforms, not very specific).
Term
Autophagy
Definition
Micro: chaperone mediated similar to proteasome. Macro: entire organelles digested in lysosome.
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