1 / 18

General Pathology – Seminar 2

General Pathology – Seminar 2. Necrosis Atrophy - causes. Jaroslava Dušková Inst. Pathol. ,1st Med. Faculty, Charles Univ. Prague http://www1.lf1.cuni.cz/~jdusk/. Death. irreversible damage of the morphological & functional integrity of. cells. organism. Cell Death. apoptosis

malaya
Download Presentation

General Pathology – Seminar 2

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. General Pathology – Seminar 2 Necrosis Atrophy - causes Jaroslava Dušková Inst. Pathol. ,1st Med. Faculty, Charles Univ. Prague http://www1.lf1.cuni.cz/~jdusk/

  2. Death irreversible damage of the morphological & functional integrity of cells organism

  3. Cell Death • apoptosis • necrosis

  4. Apoptosis • induced (from outside) or • genetically programmed cell death (cell execution / suicide) • logical and functional contrary to mitosis • a system for the removal of unnecessary, aged, or damaged cells

  5. Apoptosis -1 • Triggered by a wide range of stimuli. • Cell surface receptors like Fas or tumor necrosis factor receptor 1 (TNFR1). • Interplay of proapoptotic (Bax, Bad, Bid, Bik, and Bim) and antiapoptotic(Bcl-2 and Bcl-XL)proteins

  6. Apoptosis Morphology • chromatin condensation • cell shrinkage • budding and forming of apoptotic bodies (emission of pseudopodia) • karyorrhexis (not pathognomonic for apoptosis)

  7. Apoptosis Meaning • physiological process necessary for right organ formatting and life course • pathological process leading to organism damage - e.g. atrophy

  8. Apoptosis Ontogenesis intestinal mucose, genit. tract, immune system - T lymphocytes Regeneration of tissues and organs intestinal mucose, blood Physiological involution neonatal adrenal cortex, thymus, breast after lactation period Atrophy preassure, hyperplasia regression, slight ischemia

  9. Necrosis cell deathcaused from external insult

  10. Necrosis Biochemistry • no expression of genes de novo • energy dependent membrane systems damaged hypoxia, toxins • changes in concentrations of ions • increased water volume (oncosis) • autolysis

  11. Necrosis Morphology • pyknosis, karyorhexis, karyolysis • denaturation of proteins - eosinophilia • cell swelling • cell budding (cytoplasmic protrusions)

  12. Necrosis Meaning pathological process leading to a temporary organism damage or death

  13. Necrosis Classification according to the tissue macroscopy: • simple • liquefaction • coagulation + special types: caseation, Zenker´s of waxy appearance

  14. Necrosis - further development: • no death of organism • gangrene sicca (dry g.) humida (wet g.) emphysematosa (gas g.) • demarcation, sequestration regeneration repair

  15. Necrosis - Causes: • chemical • chlorinated hydrocarbons, heavy metal compounds, ethyl- alcohol, aphlatoxins, ... • physical • mechanical trauma, UV light, ionizing radiation, heat, cold, …. • biologic • bacteria, viruses, fungi...

  16. Atrophy diminution of organ or tissue after full development has been attained (versus hypoplasia, aplasia) • simple (x hypertrophy) • numerical(x hyperplasia)

  17. vascular pressure inactivity inanition neurogenic ionizing radiation involution senile postinflammatory endocrine unknown cause Atrophy - causes:

  18. Atrophy - meaning: • may be reversible • loss of specialised structures & hypofunction • clinically silent or unimportant (involution) • clinically apparent • metaplasia, increase of the supportive tissues - pseudohypertrophy

More Related