1 Cellular Response To Injury 1
1 Cellular Response To Injury 1
1 Cellular Response To Injury 1
Content
1. Causes of disease, Host-environment interaction in
disease, genetic factors, agents of injury, biochemical
mechanisms.
2. Reversible and irreversible changes of cell injury.
Types of cell death- necrosis and apoptosis, types of
necrosis.
3. Role of growth factors in differentiation, regeneration,
adaptations to physiological and pathological stimuli –
atrophy, hypertrophy, hyperplasia and metaplasia,
abnormal differentiation - dysplasia, anaplasia and
neoplasia.
Learning Outcomes
The student will be able to
1. Describe briefly the mechanisms of cell injury and list the
causes of cell injury.
2. Describe briefly the changes in an injured cell (reversible and
irreversible).
3. Define and describe necrosis and apoptosis and list their
causes with examples.
4. Define the growth, differentiation and regeneration, define
and describe with examples: hyperplasia, hypertrophy,
atrophy, metaplasia, dysplasia, anaplasia and neoplasia.
OVERVIEW :
cellular response to STRESS and NOXIOUS
STIMULI
Normal cell is confined to fairly narrow range of
function and structure by its state of metabolism,
differentiation and specialization;
It constantly adjusting to accommodate changing
demands and extracellular stresses;
Nevertheless it is able to handle physiological
demands, maintaining a steady state called
homeostasis.
Pathology -
General Pathology :
◦ Common reaction of cells and tissues to injurious stimuli.
Study of Pathology and Medicine :
◦ Etiology : origin of diseases – underlying causes and
modifying factors, WHY disease occurs.
◦ Genetic (inherited mutations)
◦ Acquired (infections, chemicals, nutrition, etc)
2. Weightlifter : striated
muscle hypertrophy –
physiological changes.
3. Pathological
hypertrophic of the
myocardium in
hypertension or aortic valve
diseases.
Examples of Hypertrophy
1. Physiological :
- hormonal
hyperplasia : female
breast @ puberty and
during pregnancy.
- compensatory
hyperplasia :
regeneration of residual
liver cells after partial
hepatectomy.
2. Pathological : caused
by excessive hormonal or
growth factor stimulation.
Benign prostatic hyperplasia
Hyperplasia of ducts
ATROPHY
Atrophy is also accompanied by increased autophagy giving the appearance of
increased autophagy vacuoles.
CAUSES OF ATROPHY
Atrophy is caused by decrease protein synthesis and increased protein degradation.
Pathological or physiological
PATHOLOGICAL OR PHYSIOLOGICAL
Often in response to chronic irritation.
If the stimulus that predispose to metaplasia persist, it may induce cancerous transformation.
May predispose to malignant transformation.
TWO TYPES
1. EPITHELIAL METAPLASIA
2. MESENCHYMAL METAPLASIA
1. Epithelium metaplasia
Squamous metaplasia
- Eg. chronic smoker
- Normal ciliated columnar epithelial cells of the trachea & bronchi are focally or widely
replaced by stratified squamous epithelial cells.
- Metaplastic squamous epithelium survive has survival advantages, however the protective
mechanism are lost.
- This may predispose to malignant transformation of the epithelium.
DEFINITION :
Is a premalignant condition characterized by increased
cell proliferation , the presence of cellular atypia and
decreased/altered differentiation.
It is an abnormal growth involving both
differentiation & maturation.
reversible only in early stage if the initial stimulus is
removed.
Severe dysplasia is reflection of underlying DNA
damage and may progress to frank malignancy unless it
is adequately treated.
May occur in tissue which has coincident metaplasia but
may develops without coexisting metaplasia.
Dysplasia in cervical squamous epithelium
2. Reversibility
- mild & moderate dysplasia – reversible
- severe dysplasia – irreversible
- All neoplasia - irreversible
Summary
Adaptation : reversible changes in the number,
size, phenotype, metabolic activity or function of
cells in response to changes in their environment.
◦Physiological adaptation are responses of cells
to normal stimulation by hormones or
endogenous chemical mediators.
◦Pathological adaptation are responses to stress
that allow cells to modulate their structure and
function and thus escape injury.
Summary
Definition
Autolysis
the destruction of cells or tissues by their own enzymes,
especially those released by lysosomes.
Apoptosis is a pathway of cell death that is induced by a
tightly regulated suicide program in which cells destined to
die activate intrinsic enzymes that degrade the cells’ own
nuclear DNA and nuclear and cytoplasmic proteins.
Apoptotic cells break up into fragments, called apoptotic
bodies.
Heterolysis refers to apoptosis induced by hydrolytic
enzymes from surrounding (usually inflammatory) cells.
Correctly match the following Answers
E BPH Metaplasia