cell injury, cell death, adaptations

studied byStudied by 14 people
5.0(1)
get a hint
hint

what organs in the adult body do not proliferate its cells?

1 / 48

Studying Progress

0%
New cards
49
Still learning
0
Almost done
0
Mastered
0
49 Terms
1
New cards

what organs in the adult body do not proliferate its cells?

heart and brain

New cards
2
New cards

what is hypertrophy?

the increase in the size of each cell without proliferation

New cards
3
New cards

examples of physiologic hypertrophy

muscle hypertrophy due to exercise uterus hypertrophy from pregnancy

New cards
4
New cards

What induces uterus hypertrophy during pregnancy?

hormones

New cards
5
New cards

what can be observed in the uterus after menopause?

atrophy

New cards
6
New cards

example of pathological hypertrophy

increased workload on the heart due to hypertension. (hypertrophy of the cardiac muscle, especially the left ventricle)

New cards
7
New cards

what is brown atrophy of the heart?

the heart cells become thinner due to aging. lipofuscin accumulates and a dense number of nuclei will be visible (may look like hyperplasia)

New cards
8
New cards

what is hyperplasia?

the increase in proliferation or the number of cells in a tissue

New cards
9
New cards

physiological hyperplasia examples

hormone/growth factor-induced hyperplasia (proliferation of mammary glands during puberty) bone marrow proliferation in response to massive bleeding endometrium hyperplasia during menstrual cycle

New cards
10
New cards

examples of pathological hyperplasia

excessive release of hormones, leading to benign hyperplasia (prostate and endometrium) HPV-induced

New cards
11
New cards

2 symptoms caused by HPV

skin warts, mucosal lesion

New cards
12
New cards

what is atrophy?

reduction in the size OR number of cells

New cards
13
New cards

factors that contribute to atrophy

decreased workload, denervation (nerve damage), diminished blood supply, inadequate nutrition, loss of endocrine stimulation, pressure

New cards
14
New cards

what is metaplasia?

reversible changes in the type of cell proliferating

New cards
15
New cards

examples of metaplasia

epithelial metaplasia (squamous, intestinal, pseudopyloric, etc.) mesenchymal metaplasia (formation of catilage, bone and adipose)

New cards
16
New cards

What is barrett esophagus?

when a patient has chronic GERD, the lower parts of the esophagus undergo metaplasia and become a simple columnar epithelium to tolerate the gastric acid rising to the esophagus.

New cards
17
New cards

causes of cell injury

hypoxia/ischemia toxins (such as pollutants and CO) infectious agents immunologic reactions, such as inflammatory response genetic abnormalities nutritional imbalance physical agents

New cards
18
New cards

how can down syndrome cause cell injuries?

down syndrome causes congenial malformations which lead to cell injury

New cards
19
New cards

examples of reversible injury of the membrane

blebbing, distortion of microvilli, loose intercellular exattachments.

New cards
20
New cards

reversible injury of the mitochondria

swelling, phospholipid-rich amorphous densities

New cards
21
New cards

reversible injury of ER

dilation/swelling, detachment of polysome/ribosome

New cards
22
New cards

reversible injury of the nucleus

clumping of chromatin

New cards
23
New cards

reversible injury of the cytoplasm

myelin figures

New cards
24
New cards

what is fatty change?

loss of lipid-metabolizing enzymes in the liver resulting in accumulation of fat.

New cards
25
New cards

examples of fatty change

artherosclerosis and xanthomas

New cards
26
New cards

what is atherosclerosis?

cholesterol accumulation in tunica intima

New cards
27
New cards

what is xanthoma?

cholesterol/TAG accumulation under the skin

New cards
28
New cards

what are russel bodies?

protein accumulation in plasma cells

New cards
29
New cards

what are mallory bodies?

cytoskeletal protein accumulation in cells

New cards
30
New cards

what is amyloidosis?

accumulation of amyloid

New cards
31
New cards

2 types of pathological calcification in the heart

dystrophic (when serum calcium levels are normal) and metastatic (when serum calcium levels are elevated)

New cards
32
New cards

changes observed in the nucleus of necrotic cells

pyknosis (nucleus is small), karyorrhexis (the nucleus is bursted), and karyolysis (no nucleus)

New cards
33
New cards

changes observed in the cytoplasm of necrotic cells

cytoplasm is eosinophilic, myelin figues, calcium soaps, changes in the mesenchyma.

New cards
34
New cards

changes observed in the membrane/extracellular space of necrotic cells

membrane breakage, leakage of intracellular enzymes into the blood (LDH, CK, etc)

New cards
35
New cards

What is observed in coagulative necrosis

cells look swollen, firm, and pale. infarcts of solid organs (heart, spleen, kidney) can be seen.

New cards
36
New cards

what is observed in caseous necrosis?

cells are white/yellow, cheese-like. can be seen in granulomas

New cards
37
New cards

what types of changes are observed in what order when there is cell injury?

biochemical, ultrastructural, light-microscopic, and morphological

New cards
38
New cards

characteristics of apoptosis

there is no inflammation. caused by antagonism of BCK2, which leads to the activation of BAX/BAK, release of cytochrome c, and the caspase cascade.

New cards
39
New cards

what is autophagy?

cells digest their own organelles and recycle them to provide energy and substrates. If the stress is too severe for the process to cope with it, it results in cell death by apoptosis.

New cards
40
New cards

how can ATP levels initiate necrosis?

low levels of ATP cause cell injury and necrosis

New cards
41
New cards

how can levels of ROS (reactive oxygen species) initiate necrosis?

high levels of ROS leads to cell injury

New cards
42
New cards

3 causes of hypoxia

reduced blood flow due to ischemia and artherosclerosis decreased oxygen affinity of the RBCs due to CO, anemia, and etc. inadequate oxygenation of blood due to low functions of the heart

New cards
43
New cards

excessive influx of calcium into the cells result in...

activation of phospholipase, protease, endonuclease, and ATPase

New cards
44
New cards

what substance released from a damaged mitochondrium contributes to cell injury and necrosis?

H+

New cards
45
New cards

what substance released from a damaged mitochondrium contributes to apoptosis?

cytochrome c

New cards
46
New cards

3 immediate results of accumulation of free radicals

lipid peroxidation protein modification or misfolding DNA damage

New cards
47
New cards

3 causes of membrane permeability defects

phospholipid loss, accumulation of lipid breakdown products, and cytoskeletal damage

New cards
48
New cards

what are the 5 classifications of degeneration?

cellular swelling, fatty change, hyaline change, amyloid change, mucoid change

New cards
49
New cards

what are the 5 types of cellular accumulation?

water, fat, amyloid (protein), glycogen, pathologic calcification

New cards

Explore top notes

note Note
studied byStudied by 4 people
Updated ... ago
4.0 Stars(1)
note Note
studied byStudied by 4 people
Updated ... ago
5.0 Stars(1)
note Note
studied byStudied by 7 people
Updated ... ago
5.0 Stars(1)
note Note
studied byStudied by 8 people
Updated ... ago
5.0 Stars(1)
note Note
studied byStudied by 53 people
Updated ... ago
4.7 Stars(3)
note Note
studied byStudied by 9 people
Updated ... ago
5.0 Stars(1)
note Note
studied byStudied by 8211 people
Updated ... ago
4.7 Stars(89)

Explore top flashcards

flashcards Flashcard52 terms
studied byStudied by 39 people
Updated ... ago
5.0 Stars(1)
flashcards Flashcard39 terms
studied byStudied by 61 people
Updated ... ago
5.0 Stars(2)
flashcards Flashcard61 terms
studied byStudied by 24 people
Updated ... ago
5.0 Stars(1)
flashcards Flashcard126 terms
studied byStudied by 5 people
Updated ... ago
5.0 Stars(1)
flashcards Flashcard81 terms
studied byStudied by 29 people
Updated ... ago
5.0 Stars(1)
flashcards Flashcard48 terms
studied byStudied by 40 people
Updated ... ago
5.0 Stars(1)
flashcards Flashcard166 terms
studied byStudied by 10 people
Updated ... ago
5.0 Stars(1)
flashcards Flashcard574 terms
studied byStudied by 5821 people
Updated ... ago
4.9 Stars(35)