Introduction To Pathology: Pathology Is The Study (Logos) of Disease (Pathos)
Introduction To Pathology: Pathology Is The Study (Logos) of Disease (Pathos)
Introduction To Pathology: Pathology Is The Study (Logos) of Disease (Pathos)
(ischemic necrosis)
Acute MI
Figure: The relationships between normal, adapted, reversibly injured, and dead myocardial cells
Cellular Responses to Stress and Toxic Insults:
Adaptation, Injury, and Death
Cellular Responses to Stress and Toxic Insults:
Adaptation, Injury, and Death
Cellular Responses to Stress and Toxic Insults:
Adaptation, Injury, and Death
Pathologic (or abnormal) adaptations are responses to stress that allow cells
to modulate their structure and function and thus escape injury. Such
adaptations can take several distinct forms.
Hypertrophy vs. Hyperplasia
Hypertrophy Hyperplasia
-an increase in the size of cells resulting in -is characterized by an increase in the
increase in the size of the organ. number of cells in an organ or tissue,
-in pure hypertrophy there are no new cells, just usually resulting in increased mass of the
bigger cells, enlarged by an increased amount of organ or tissue, and as a consequence of
structural proteins and organelles. increased cell division by mitosis.
-occurs when cells are incapable of dividing. -an adaptive response in cells capable of
-can be physiologic (e.g. in skeletal muscle due replication.
to sustained wt-bearing exercise) or pathologic -can be physiologic or pathologic.
(in cardiac muscle due to hypertension). -Hyperplasia takes place if the cell
-may be caused either by increased functional population is capable of dividing, and
demand or by specific hormonal stimulation. thus increasing the number of cells.
Hypertrophy vs. Hyperplasia
Hypertrophy and hyperplasia can also occur together, may be triggered by the
same external stimulus and obviously both result in an enlarged (hypertrophic)
organ.
These stimuli turn on signal transduction pathways that lead to the induction
of a number of genes, which in turn stimulate synthesis of numerous cellular
proteins, including growth factors and structural proteins.
The result is the synthesis of more proteins and myofilaments per cell, which
achieves improved performance and thus a balance between the demand and
the cell's functional capacity.
Biochemical mechanisms of myocardial hypertrophy
Biochemical mechanisms of myocardial hypertrophy
Types of Hyperplasia
Hyperplasia
physiologic pathologic
e.g. endometrial hyperplasia
called endometriosis
For instance, after partial hepatectomy growth factors are produced in the
liver that engage receptors on the surviving cells and activate signaling
pathways that stimulate cell proliferation. But if the proliferative capacity of
the liver cells is compromised, as in some forms of hepatitis causing cell injury,
hepatocytes can instead regenerate from intrahepatic stem cells.
Atrophy
Atrophy is reduced size of an organ or tissue resulting from a decrease in cell size and
number.
Atrophy can be physiologic or pathologic.
Pathologic atrophy depends on the underlying cause and can be local or generalized.
*A thyroglossal duct that fails to atrophy is called a persistent thyroglossal duct, a condition that may lead to the
formation of a thyroglossal duct cyst.
The common causes and types of atrophy
The fundamental cellular changes associated with atrophy are identical in all types of
atrophy.
The initial response is a decrease in cell size and organelles, which may reduce the
metabolic needs of the cell sufficiently to permit its survival.
In atrophic muscle, the cells contain fewer mitochondria and myofilaments and a
reduced amount of rough ER.
By bringing into balance the cell's metabolic demand and the lower levels of blood
supply, nutrition, or trophic stimulation, a new equilibrium is achieved. Early in the
process atrophic cells may have diminished function, but they are not dead.
However, atrophy caused by gradually reduced blood supply may progress to the
point at which cells are irreversibly injured and die, often by apoptosis. Cell death by
apoptosis also contributes to the atrophy of endocrine organs after hormone
withdrawal.
Atrophy - Mechanisms
Atrophy results from decreased protein synthesis and increased protein degradation
in cells.
Protein synthesis decreases because of reduced metabolic activity.
The degradation of cellular proteins occurs mainly by the ubiquitin-proteasome
pathway. Nutrient deficiency and disuse may activate ubiquitin ligases, which attach
the small peptide ubiquitin to cellular proteins and target these proteins for
degradation in proteasomes.
This pathway is also thought to be responsible for the accelerated proteolysis seen in
a variety of catabolic conditions, including cancer cachexia*.
*Cachexia or wasting syndrome is loss of weight, muscle atrophy, fatigue, weakness, and significant loss of appetite
in someone who is not actively trying to lose weight. Also seen in AIDS, COPD, TB, CHF, multiple sclerosis, etc.
Atrophy - Mechanisms
Some of the cell debris within the autophagic vacuoles may resist digestion and
persist as membrane-bound residual bodies that may remain as a sarcophagus
in the cytoplasm.
An example of such residual bodies is the lipofuscin granules. When present in
sufficient amounts, they impart a brown discoloration to the tissue (brown
atrophy). Autophagy is associated with various types of cell injury.
Metaplasia
Types of metaplasia:
A.Epithelial metaplasia – 1. columnar to squamous, 2. squamous to columnar
B.Connective tissue metaplasia.
Metaplasia - types
Metaplasia does not result from a change in the phenotype of an already differentiated cell
type; instead it is the result of a reprogramming of stem cells that are known to exist in
normal tissues, or of undifferentiated mesenchymal cells present in connective tissue.
In a metaplastic change, these precursor cells differentiate along a new pathway. The
differentiation of stem cells to a particular lineage is brought about by signals generated by
cytokines, growth factors, and extracellular matrix components in the cells' environment.
These external stimuli promote the expression of genes that drive cells toward a specific
differentiation pathway.
e.g. In the case of vitamin A deficiency or excess, it is known that retinoic acid regulates
gene transcription directly through nuclear retinoid receptors, which can influence the
differentiation of progenitors derived from tissue stem cells.
How other external stimuli cause metaplasia is unknown, but it is clear that they too
somehow alter the activity of transcription factors that regulate differentiation.
Cellular Injury
Figure: Sources and consequences of increased cytosolic calcium in cell injury. ATP, adenosine triphosphate
Cellular Injury
Apoptosis
•Some noxious stimuli, especially those that damage DNA, induce another
type of death, apoptosis, which is characterized by -
nuclear dissolution without complete loss of membrane integrity.
Apoptosis
•Some noxious stimuli, especially those that damage DNA, induce another
type of death, apoptosis, which is characterized by -
nuclear dissolution without complete loss of membrane integrity.