General Pathology
General Pathology
General Pathology
General Pathology
For Health sciences students
First edition
By
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The Contents
Page
Introduction of pathology...................................................................1
Inflammation...…………….................................................................1
Pathogenesis of inflammation ..................................................3
Types of Acute inflammation...................................................8
Chronic inflammation..............................................................13
Repair ..................................................................................................15
Types of repair....................................................................................19
Healing of injury bone.............................................................24
Cell injury ...........................................................................................26
Reversible cell injury……….………………………………..28
Irreversible cell injury………………………………………..35
Infectious diseases……… ...................................................................41
Bacterial infections………………………………....................41
Fungal infection.........................................................................44
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Introduction of pathology
Pathology
Pathology Is the scientific study of disease. It is concerned with the causes and
effects of disease, and the functional and structural changes that occur.
Changes at the molecular and cellular level correlate with the clinical manifestations
of the disease. Understanding the processes of disease assists in the accurate
recognition, diagnosis and treatment of diseases.
a. Histopathology
b. Cytopathology
c. Hematopathology
d. Immunohistochemistry
e. Microbiological examination
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f. Biochemical examination
g. Cytogenetics
h. Molecular techniques
i. Autopsy
A. Histopathological techniques
Histopathological examination studies tissues under the microscope. During this study,
the pathologist looks for abnormal structures in the tissue.
Once the tissue is removed from the patient, it has to be immediately fixed by
putting it into adequate amount of 10% Formaldehyde (10% formalin) before
sending it to the pathologist.
3. To fortify the tissue against the deleterious effects of the various stages in the
preparation of sections and tissue processing.
4. To leave the tissues in a condition this facilitates differential staining with dyes
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Once the tissue arrives at the pathology department, the pathologist will exam it
macroscopically (i.e. naked-eye examination of tissues).Then the tissue is processed to
make it ready for microscopic examination.
The whole purpose of the tissue processing is to prepare a very thin tissue (i.e. five
to seven μm or onecell thick tissue) which can be clearly seen under the
microscope.
The stains can be Hematoxylin /Eosin stain (H&E) or special stains such as PAS,
Immunohistochemistry, etc...
The H&E stain is routinely used. It gives the nucleus a blue color & the cytoplasm & the
extracellular matrix a pinkish color. Then the pathologist will look for abnormal structures
in the tissue.
B. Cytopathologic techniques
Cytology is the study of cells from various body sites to determine the cause or nature of
disease.
Applications of Cytology:
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Cytopathology may be used alone or in conjunction with other modalities to
diagnose tumors revealed by physical or radiological examinations.
For some types of cancers, cytology is the most feasible method of surveillance to detect
recurrence.The best example is periodic urine cytology to monitor the recurrence of
cancer of the urinary tract.
Cheap,
Takes less time and
Needs no anesthesia to take specimens.
Cytopathologic methods
In FNAC, cells are obtained by aspirating the diseased organ using a very thin needle
under negative pressure.
2. Exfoliative cytology
Refers to the examination of cells that are shed spontaneously into body fluids or
secretions.
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Examples include: sputum, cerebrospinal fluid, urine, effusions in body cavities
(pleura,pericardium, peritoneum), nipple discharge and vaginal discharge.
3. Abrasive cytology
Refers to methods by which cells are dislodged by various tools from body surfaces (skin,
mucous membranes, and serous membranes). E.g. preparation of cervical smears with a
spatula or a small brush to detect cancer of the uterine cervix at early stages.
C. Hematological examination
This is a method by which abnormalities of the cells of the blood and their precursors in
the bone marrow are investigated to diagnose the different kinds of anemia & leukemia.
D. Immunohistochemistry
This is a method is used to detect a specific antigen in the tissue in order to identify the
type of disease.
E. Autopsy
Autopsy is examination of the dead body to identify the cause of death. This can be for
forensic or clinical purposes. However, for most diseases, diagnosis is based on a
combination of pathological investigations.
Inflammation
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• Definition: - A local protective response of living vascularized tissues to kill
and remove injurious agents& prepare for repair.
Causes of inflammation
1. Fever
2. Constitutional symptoms: nausea, malaise and anorexia
3. High erythrocyte sedimentation rate (ESR)
4. Changes in WBCs counts
A. Leucocytosis ( increased number of WBCs)
Bacteria ----------- Neutrophils
Parasites ---------- Eosinophils
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Viruses ----------- Lymphocyts
B. Or Leucopenia ( decreased number of WBCs)
Some viral infections, salmonella infections.
5. Immunologic reactions - increased level of some substances (C-reactive
protein)
Local Cardinal Signs Of Inflammation:-
1. Redness
2. Hotness
3. Swelling
4. Pain
Types of Inflammation
2- Cellular events
A. Exudation of leucocytes
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4. Chemotaxis: It is the directed movement of emigrating leukocytes to the site of
injury. The aim of this movement is to reach the organisms or particles to be
phagocytized.
B. Phagocytosis - it is the process by which the phagocytic cells recognize then
engulf abnormal particles such as bacteria, dead cells, fibrin and foreign bodies,
followed by their degradation.
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b) Engulfment: phagocytic leukocytes surround the opsonised bacteria and send
pseudopodia around the bacteria or the object to be engulfed. Fusion of
pseudopodia →phagocytic vacuole (phagosome).
1. Dilution of toxins
2. Delivery of antibodies and antibiotic
3. Brings chemical mediators derived from the plasma e.g. complement
5. Forms a network upon which phagocytic cells can remove towards their
target.
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Definition:- Acute localized bacterial infection accompanied by neutrophilic
infiltrate in the inflamed tissue, result in necrosis
Sites: - common in skin, subcutaneous tissue and may occurs internal organs as
brain, lung, liver, kidney, etc.
Cause: - Staphlococcus aureus secreted coagulase enzyme that lead localization
Pathological Features
- Early: Two zones necrotic tissue and inflammatory cells.
- Later: Three zones
a) A central necrotic core.
b) A mid zone of pus.
c) The peripheral zone: pyogenic membrane which is formed by fibrin
and help in localize the infection.
Fate of abscess
1- Small abscess: Pus is absorbed, followed by healing.
2- Large abscess: absorption of pus is slow, a large abscess pointing & rupture
(spontaneous evacuation if not surgical drainage) healing.
3- Complications
1-Spread of infection:
a) Direct enlarged in size.
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b) Lymphatic lymphangitis and lymphadenitis.
c) Blood spread may lead to Septicaemia, Pyaemia
2- Complications of evacuation and healing:
a) Ulcer →→ A local defect of the surface of an organ or tissue, which
is produced by the sloughing (shedding) of inflammatory necrotic
tissue
b) Sinus. →→is blind ended tract between abscess and epithelial
surface due to chronic discharge to surface
c) Fistula.→→ is a track connecting two epithelial lined surfaces
d) Keloid
e) Hemorrhage e.g. hemoptysis with lung abscess.
f) Rupture: e.g. brain abscess.
3-Chronicity. Examples: - Chronic lung abscess.
4-Other complications: Compression effects: e.g. in case of brain abscess
2- Carbuncle
Definition: - It is multiple communicating deep subcutaneous abscesses, opening
on skin by multiple sinuses. Carbuncle is common in special patient→ diabetics
(low immunity).
Sites: - common in special sites in the back of the neck and scalp, where the skin
and subcutaneous tissues are thick and tough due to dense fibrous septa dividing
the subcutaneous tissue into compartments.
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3- Furuncle or boil
• Definition: - It produces a small abscess related to hair follicle.
Cellulitis
Definition: - it is diffuse acute suppurative inflammation with pus formation.
Cellulitis is common in special patient→ diabetics (low immunity).
Features
Abscess Cellulitis
Localized suppurative
Type Diffuse suppurative inflammation
inflammation
Cause Staphlococcus aureus Streptococcus haemolyticus
organisms secreted coagulase organisms secreted hyaluronidase
Pathogenesis enzyme that lead to fibrin & streptokinase enzymes that
deposition localization dissolve the fibrin
Site Any tissue Loose connective tissue
Thick, less red cells, few Thin, sanguineous, and extensive
Pus
necrotic tissue necrosis
Spread Less More
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B. Non- suppurative/ Non- purulent acute inflammation.
1. Serous inflammation
• Characterized by: - excessive clear fluid poor in both inflammatory cells &
fibrin.
Examples:-
Skin blisters due to skin burns.
Inflammation of serous membranes (pleura, pericardium and peritoneum)
2. Fibrinous inflammation
Examples:- -
Catarrhal rhinitis (common cold)
Catarrhal appendicitis
4. Pseudomembranous /Membranous inflammation
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Occur in mucous membrane with dirty grayish false membrane forming on
surface e.g. toxins of diphteria and irritant gases.
5. Allergic inflammation.
Characterized by: - the presence of excessive serous fluid and many eosinophils in
the inflammatory exudate.
Examples:-
Allergic rhinitis.
Allergic conjunctivitis.
Chronic Inflammation
Definition:- Inflammation of prolonged duration “weeks to years ”, in which
inflammation, tissue destruction occur in same time.
Causes
May follow acute inflammation due to failure of immunity
May start chronic by gradual onset (not preceded by acute inflammation) due
to one or more of the following:
1. Infection with resistant organisms e.g. T.B.
2. Non-living irritants as foreign bodies e.g. talc or silicosis (inhalation
of silica particles into lungs)
3. Development of autoimmunity e.g. rheumatoid arthritis.
Types of chronic inflammation
1. Chronic Non-specific Inflammations:
Usually follow acute inflammation, e.g. chronic abscess.
Why termed "nonspecific’’?
1. All show the same microscopic features of chronic inflammation
(chronic inflammatory cells, fibrosis….)
2. We can’t identify the cause .
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2. Chronic Specific Inflammations:
Usually start chronic.
Show microscopic features of chronic inflammation with additional
features specific for each type as (bilharzia ova in cases of bilharziasis).
The majority of chronic specific inflammations occur in the form of
granulomas.
Granulomas/ granulomatous inflammation
Definition:- A special form of chronic inflammation characterized by nodular
collections of many macrophages with mixture of lymphocytes, plasma cells, giant
cells.
Characterized by: -
The macrophages have an important role in formation of granuloma.
The macrophages commonly change into epithelioid cells (large pink,
activated macrophages that look like epithelial cells)
Sometimes these epithelioid cells fuse together, forming giant cells, with
multiple nuclei inside (multinulcleated giant cells)
Some granulomas may exhibit central necrosis.
Old granulomas surrounded by fibrosis.
Types of granulomas:
1. Infectious granulomas: Most of these granulomas are necrotizing.
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Examples:- T.B, Leprosy, Syphilis, Bilharziasis
2. Foreign body granulomas: Mostly non-necrotizing granulomas.
Examples:- Silicosis & Surgical suture
3. Granulomas of unkown aetiology: Mostly non-necrotizing granulomas.
Examples:- Sarcoidosis& Crohn's disease.
Acute Chronic
Features
Inflammation Inflammation
Response Immediate reaction of Persisting reactions of tissue to
tissue to injury injury
Onset Rapid Slow
Tissue injury and Usually mild and self- Often severe and progressive
fibrosis limited
Repair
Repair/Healing
Types of repair
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1. Regeneration
Replacement of dead tissue by same type of tissue .Seen with mild and
superficial injury
2. Fibrosis/ Scar (Fibrosis= Gliosis in CNS)
Replacement of dead tissue by connective tissue. Seen with severe injury
Skin epidermis
GIT epithelium
Bone marrow cells
Stem cells
Self-renewal capacity
Asymmetric replication
Capacity to develop into multiple differentiations
Extensive proliferative potential
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2) Stable cells (quiescent cells)
Examples:-
3- Permanent cell:
Examples:-
Cardiac muscle
Skeletal muscle
Neurons (CNS)
A. General factors
1. Age
2. Nutritional Deficiency
3. Drugs
4. Endocrine diseases
5. General heath (Infection /tumor)
B. Local factors
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With mild to moderate injury (e.g. hepatitis A infection) →→ cells damage
with survival of supporting tissue(reticular tissue) regeneration
→Normal Liver
With severe injury (e.g. hepatitis C infection) →→ gross tissue damage
including supporting tissue → post necrotic scaring (fibrosis)Liver
cirrhosis.
2. Blood supply
1. Growth factors.
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Types of repair
1-Healing by regeneration
Definition: - Proliferation of cells to replace the damaged components by same type
of cells and return to a normal state
Occurs in
• All the time in labile tissues
• Limited form in stable tissues according to severity of injury
Examples:-
1. Healing of epidermis
2. Healing of mucous membrane
3. Healing of liver cells
4. Healing of bone fractures
5. Healing of Peripheral nerve
2- Healing By Fibrosis
Definition: - Replace the damaged components by scar formation due to deposition
of connective (fibrous) tissue
Occurs in
• With severe injury of all types of tissues
• All the time in permanent cells
Examples:-
1. Healing of myocardial infarction.
2. Healing of CNS infarction or brain abscess
3. Severe destruction of connective tissue frame work (as in liver cirrhosis)
4. With extensive cell injury e.g. necrosis
5. In chronic inflammation
6. Wound healing (primary and second intension)
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2- Angiogenesis
Definition: - Formation of new blood vessels by action of growth factors include
VEGF, PDGF, FGF &TGF – beta.
Source:-
1. Proliferation from endothelial precursor cells.
2. Budding from pre-existing vessels
3- Fibrogenesis
Definition: - Migration and proliferation of fibroblasts to the site of damage by
action of growth factors include PDGF, FGF, TGF – beta & Cytokins e.g. TNF,
IL-1
2. Proliferating fibroblasts.
3. Inflammatory cells.
4. Edematous stroma .
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5- Maturation of granulation tissue permanent scar
Synthesis of Extracellular matrix (ECM) proteins by action of Growth
factors include PDGF , FGF , TGF & IL-1.
6- Tissue remodeling
Degradation of excess collagen and other ECM proteins
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2- Second intention healing (Second union)
• Larger wounds that have large gap due to (extensive loss of tissue, necrosis &
infection)
• Large amount of granulation tissue & fibrosis
• Healing is slower, and more scarring/ infection
Examples:
1. Infarction& abscess
2. Infected surgical wound
3. Large burns and ulcers
Wound Small size, small gap & Large size, large gap &
Clean Unclean
Tissue loss No Yes
Chance of Infection Low High
Healing Fast Slow
Margins Surgically clean Irregular
Healing Scanty granulation tissue Granulation tissue fill the
gap
Scar tissue Scanty Abundant
Outcome wounds Nearly linear scar Contracted irregular wound
Complication Less common More common
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Complications of Wound Healing
2. Cosmetic Deformities
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Cell Injury
Definition: - Cell injury is a sequence of events that occur if the limits of adaptive
capability of cells to stimulus are exceeded or no adaptive response is possible.
Necrosis
Apoptosis
1- Intracellular accumulation
- Metabolic derangements in cells can lead to the intracellular accumulation of
abnormal amounts of various substances that remains either transiently or
permanently.
- Cellular accumulations are a sign of injury; also their accumulation can cause
cellular injury
- These accumulated substances included:-
B- Normal cellular substances
Water
Lipid
Protein
Glycogen
C- Abnormal or exogenous substances
Carbon, silica, Asbestos, bacteria.
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1. Intracellular accumulation of water
Examples:
Parenchymatous organs e.g. liver, kidney tubules, heart & other glandular epith. of
organs
Intracellular accumulation of lipids
Steatosis (fatty change)
Causes:-
Starvation.
Malnutrition
Chronic illness.
Diabetes mellitus
Severe anaemia
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Ischaemia
Septicaemia
Poisons
Late pregnancy
Clinical Significance:-
Gross:-
1. Organ enlarged, Smooth & capsule stretched, soft greasy& rounded borders.
Color is yellow; diffuse or patchy.
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Microscopic:- fat appears as small clear intracellular vacuoles or a single large
vacuole push nucleus eccentric signet ring appearance., Fat stained orange
with Sudan III stain.
1- Hyaline Degeneration
- Not a distinct chemical entity. Various histological or cytological alterations
characterized by homogeneous, glasslike appearance in hematoxylin and
eosin-stained sections
- Accumulation of protein droplets in proximal renal tubule in renal disease
(Nephrotic syndrome).
- Mallory bodies- alcoholic liver disease ,
- Russel bodies- chronic inflammation.
- Hyaline proteins may deposit extracellular e.g hyalinosis of blood vessels in
hypertension od D.M.
2- Mucoid Degeneration
Accumulation of excessive amount of mucin in unusual location, it is called
mucoid/mucinous degeneration e.g. Cancer with high degree of mucous deg are
called mucinous carcinoma. Extracellular accumulation of mucin is called
myxomatous degeneration.
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3- Pathological Pigments
a. Lipofuscin pigment is wear and tear pigment with aging is sign of free
radical injury and lipid peroxidation. Lipofuscin pigment deposit mainly in
heart, liver….etc. In tissue sections it appears as a yellow-brown, finely
granular cytoplasmic, often perinuclear, pigment.
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B- Exogenous coming from outside the body
4- Pathological Calcification
Dystrophic calcification
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• Patients have a normal serum calcium level & absences of any defect
of calcium metabolism
• Dystrophic calcification affects previously damaged & dead tissue as
Areas of necrosis coagulative,caseous, fat, or liquefactive type.
The atheromas of advanced atherosclerosis
Aging or damaged heart valves.
Sometimes a tuberculous lymph node is virtually converted to
stone.
Others, old thrombus, hematoma.
Metastatic calcification
Dystrophic Metastatic
Features
calcification calcification
Reflect deranged of calcium
Pathogenesis Sign of cell injury
metabolism
site Dead or damage tissue Normal tissue
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Serum calcium Normal High
Calcium metabolism Normal Abnormal
Patient with
Example Wall of chronic abscess
hyperparathyroidism
1- Necrosis
Microscopic:
1- Cellular Changes:
a) Cytoplasmic Changes: Cytoplasm is eosinophilic due to
loss of cytoplasmic RNA (basophilic) and glycogen (granular) with indistinct cell
membranes.
2- Architectural Changes: 2 possibilities:
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2-Healing: mainly by fibrosis
Types Of Necrosis
1. Coagulative necrosis
2. Liquifactive necrosis
3. Caseous necrosis
4. Fat necrosis (enzymztic & traumatic)
5. Gangrenous necrosis
6. Fibrinoid necrosis
1- Coagulative Necrosis:
• Seen in: - infarction of all organs except CNS.
• Gross:- Opaque yellow swollen soft friable tissue
• Microscopic: - Swelling of cells: homogenous dark pink cytoplasm of
necrotic cells (Protein denaturation).
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• Karyolysis: dissolved nucleus
2- Liquefactive Necrosis:
Seen in: - infarcts of CNS, pyogenic abscess (pus).
Pathogenesis: - Usually due to predominant of enzymatic dissolution of
necrotic cells (usually due to release of proteolytic enzymes from neutrophils)
over protein denaturation.
• Micro
Cystic space with necrotic cell debris and macrophages
Cyst wall formed by proliferating, capillaries and gliosis or fibrosis
5- Fat Necrosis
a) Enzymatic Fat Necrosis:
Seen in :- Acute Hemorrhagic Pancreatitis
Pathogenesis: inflammation →escape of lipase and protease enzymes
necrosis surrounding peritoneal fat cells.
Grossly: chalky white hard patches, because necrotic fat cells →fatty acids +
calcium = calcium soaps.
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Microscopic: - necrotic fat cells, surrounded by chronic inflammatory cells
and fibrosis, with calcification.
Gross: Hard chalky white mass. This mass clinically mistaken for breast
tumor.
6- Fibrinoid Necrosis:
Seen in: - the walls of blood vessels in vasculitides e.g. autoimmune collagen
diseases (as rheumatic fever, rheumatoid arthritis, lupus erythematosus…etc), that
lead to immune mediated vascular damage
Microscopic: - Glassy, eosinophilic fibrin-like material is deposited within the
vascular walls.
2- Apoptosis (programmed cell death)
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Types Of Apoptosis
Physiologic
Pathologic
Irradiated tissues
Morphology of Apoptosis
Infectious diseases
1- Bacterial Infections
Routes of infection:
1. Exogenous by inhalation, ingestion or local contact with skin or mucous
membranes, blood or blood product transfusion
2. Endogenous from bacteria normally present in the body as intestinal E. coli,
oral streptococcus viridans and respiratory pneumococci. Infection occurs if
immunity is lowered.
Effects of bacterial infection:
1. Cell injury: Necrosis and degeneration.
2. Inflammation: acute, subacute or chronic.
3. Development of immunity and/ or hypersensitivity.
4. Blood invasion with bacteria and/or bacterial products leading to
a) Bacteremia.
b) Toxemia
c) Septicemia
d) Pyaemia
Bacteremia
Definition: This is transient invasion of blood with bacteria without significant
toxaemia.
examples:
After tooth extraction (Streptococcus viridans bacteria).
A septic focus as tonsillitis & sinusitis.
Effects:
In most cases, no harmful effects.
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Uncommonly, causing lesions. Specially with a predisposing factor, e.g.
Streptococcus viridans that reach the blood after tooth extraction can
cause subacute infective endocarditis on top of rheumatic valvulitis.
Toxaemia
Definition: the circulation of bacterial toxins in the blood harmful effects may
association with septicemia and pyaemia.
These toxins may be endotoxins (released only from dead bacteria) or exotoxins
(released from alive bacteria)
Septicaemia
Definition: A fatal condition, large numbers of virulent bacteria circulate and
multiply in blood accompanied by severe toxaemia.
Etiology:
Pyaemia
Definition: It is fatal condition, development of multiple small abscesses (pyaemic
abscesses) in one or more organs due to the circulation of septic emboli derived
from septic thrombi.
Types of pyaemia :
1. Pulmonary pyaemia
2. Portal pyaemia
3. Systemic pyaemia.
Tuberculosis
In Primary tuberculosis: it is the first time to TB bacilli enter the body reach to
primary site as lung, intestine, tonsils, or skin by
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Others sites of common tuberculosis infection
Complications of tuberculosis:
1. Spread
2. Hemorrhage
3. Organ destruction and severe fibrosis
4. Recurrence (re-activation)
2- Fungal Infections
Predisposing factors:-
• Low immunity e.g. Corticosteroid administration, prolonged broad spectrum
antibiotic therapy, immunosuppressive therapy or others states of
immunocompromization as diabetes and AIDS
• defects in neutrophillic and macrophage functions
Candidiasis (Moniliasis)
Definition: Infection with the fungus called "Candida albicans". This fungus is a
normal commensal of oral cavity, GIT, vagina and skin.t becomes pathogenic in
the low immunity conditions.
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Inflammation
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