minarcik robbins 2013_ch1-cell

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CELL ADAPTATIONS CELL ADAPTATIONS CELL INJURY CELL INJURY CELL DEATH CELL DEATH

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Page 1: Minarcik robbins 2013_ch1-cell

CELL ADAPTATIONSCELL ADAPTATIONS

CELL INJURYCELL INJURY

CELL DEATHCELL DEATH

Page 2: Minarcik robbins 2013_ch1-cell

OBJECTIVESUnderstand the 3 main anatomic concepts of disease---Degenerative, Inflammatory,

Neoplastic

Understand the concepts of cellular growth adaptations---Hyperplasia, Hypertrophy, Atrophy, Metaplasia

Understand the factors of cell injury and death---O2, Physical, Chemical, Infection, Immunologic, Genetic, Nutritional

Page 3: Minarcik robbins 2013_ch1-cell

OBJECTIVESUnderstand the pathologic mechanisms at

the SUB-cellular level---ATP, Mitochondria, Ca++, Free Radicals, Membranes

Understand and differentiate the concepts of APOPTOSIS and NECROSIS

Understand SUB-cellular responses to injury---Lysosomes, Smooth endoplasmic reticulum, Mitochondria, Cytoskeleton

Page 4: Minarcik robbins 2013_ch1-cell

OBJECTIVESIdentify common INTRA-cellular

accumulations---Fat, Hyaline, CA++, Proteins, Glycogen, Pigments

Understand aging and differentiate the concepts of preprogrammed death versus wear and tear.

Page 5: Minarcik robbins 2013_ch1-cell

PATHOLOGY

Pathos (suffering)

Logos

Page 6: Minarcik robbins 2013_ch1-cell

PATHOLOGY•GENERAL

•SYSTEMIC

Page 7: Minarcik robbins 2013_ch1-cell

PATHOLOGY• ETIOLOGY (“Cause”)• PATHOGENESIS

(“Insidious development”)• MORPHOLOGY

(ABNORMAL ANATOMY)• CLINICAL EXPRESSION

Page 8: Minarcik robbins 2013_ch1-cell

ETIOLOGY•Cause

vs.

•Risk Factors

Page 9: Minarcik robbins 2013_ch1-cell

PATHOGENESIS“sequence of events from the initial stimulus to the ultimate expression of the disease”

Page 10: Minarcik robbins 2013_ch1-cell

MORPHOLOGY• Abnormal Anatomy

–Gross

–Microscopic

–Radiologic

–Molecular

Page 11: Minarcik robbins 2013_ch1-cell

CLINICAL EXPRESSION

• Ironically, even though “clinical expression” is not often present in subclinical diseases, it is the “pathos” of pathology.

Page 12: Minarcik robbins 2013_ch1-cell

Most long term students of pathology, like myself, will strongly agree that the very best way for most minds to remember, or identify, or understand a disease is to associate it with

a morphologic IMAGE.This can be gross, electron microscopic, light microscopic, radiologic, or molecular.

In MOST cases it is at the LIGHT MICROSCOPIC LEVEL.

Page 13: Minarcik robbins 2013_ch1-cell

CLINICAL/FUNCTIONAL

Rudolph Virchow

1821-1902

The Father of Modern Pathology

Page 14: Minarcik robbins 2013_ch1-cell

FUNCTIONAL DEFINITION OF DISEASE

HOMEOSTASIS

Page 15: Minarcik robbins 2013_ch1-cell

CELL DEATH• APOPTOSIS (“normal”

death)

• NECROSIS (“premature” or “untimely” death due to “causes”

Page 16: Minarcik robbins 2013_ch1-cell

The –plasia brothers• HYPER-

• HYPO- (A-)• NORMO-

• META-

• DYS-

• ANA-• “Frank” ANA-

Page 17: Minarcik robbins 2013_ch1-cell

HYPER-PLASIAIN-CREASE IN NUMBER OF CELLS

Page 18: Minarcik robbins 2013_ch1-cell

HYPO-PLASIADE-CREASE IN NUMBER OF CELLS

Page 19: Minarcik robbins 2013_ch1-cell

The –trophy brothers• HYPER-• HYPO- (A-)

• DYS-

Page 20: Minarcik robbins 2013_ch1-cell

HYPER-TROPHYIN-CREASE IN SIZE OF CELLS

Page 21: Minarcik robbins 2013_ch1-cell

HYPO-TROPHY?DE-CREASE IN SIZE OF CELLS?

RARELY

USED

TERM

Page 22: Minarcik robbins 2013_ch1-cell

A-TROPHY?DE-CREASE IN SIZE OF CELLS? YES

SHRINKAGE IN CELL SIZE DUE TO LOSS OF CELL

SUBSTANCE

Page 23: Minarcik robbins 2013_ch1-cell

ATROPHY• DECREASED WORKLOAD

• DENERVATION

• DECREASED BLOOD FLOW

• DECREASED NUTRITION

• AGING (involution)

• PRESSURE

Page 24: Minarcik robbins 2013_ch1-cell

METAPLASIA• A SUBSTITUTION of one NORMAL

CELL or TISSUE type, for ANOTHER– COLUMNAR SQUAMOUS (Cervix)– SQUAMOUS COLUMNAR

(Glandular) (Stomach)– FIBROUS BONE

–WHY?

Page 25: Minarcik robbins 2013_ch1-cell

CELL DEATH• APOPTOSIS vs. NECROSIS

• What is DEATH? (What is LIFE?)

–DEATH is IRREVERSIBLE

Page 26: Minarcik robbins 2013_ch1-cell

So the question is….

…NOT what is life or death, but what is REVERSIBLE or IRREVERSIBLE injury

Page 27: Minarcik robbins 2013_ch1-cell

REVERSIBLE CHANGES

• REDUCED oxidative phosphorylation

• ATP depletion

• Cellular “SWELLING”

Page 28: Minarcik robbins 2013_ch1-cell

IRREVERSIBLE CHANGES

• MITOCHONDRIAL IRREVERSIBILITY

• IRREVERSIBLE MEMBRANE DEFECTS

• LYSOSOMAL DIGESTION

Page 29: Minarcik robbins 2013_ch1-cell

REVERSIBLE = INJURY

IRREVERSIBLE = DEATH

SOME INJURIES CAN LEAD TO DEATH IF PROLONGED

and/or SEVERE enough

Page 30: Minarcik robbins 2013_ch1-cell

INJURY CAUSES (REVERSIBLE)

THE

USUAL

SUSPECTS

But…WHO are the THREE

WORST?

Page 31: Minarcik robbins 2013_ch1-cell

INJURY CAUSES (REVERSIBLE)Hypoxia, (decreased O2)

PHYSICAL Agents

CHEMICAL Agents

INFECTIOUS Agents

Immunologic

Genetic

Nutritional

Page 32: Minarcik robbins 2013_ch1-cell

INJURY MECHANISMS (REVERSIBLE)

DECREASED ATP

MITOCHONDRIAL DAMAGE

INCREASED INTRACELLULAR CALCIUM

INCREASED FREE RADICALS

INCREASED CELL MEMBRANE PERMEABILITY

Page 33: Minarcik robbins 2013_ch1-cell

What is Death?What is Life?

•DEATH is–IRREVERSIBLE MITOCHONDRIAL

DYSFUNCTION

–PROFOUND MEMBRANE DISTURBANCES

• LIFE is……..???

Page 34: Minarcik robbins 2013_ch1-cell

CONTINUUM• REVERSIBLE • IRREVERSIBLE• DEATH• EM• LIGHT MICROSCOPY• GROSS APPEARANCES

Page 35: Minarcik robbins 2013_ch1-cell

DEATH:ELECTRON MICROSCOPY

Page 36: Minarcik robbins 2013_ch1-cell

DEATH:LIGHT MICROSCOPY

Page 37: Minarcik robbins 2013_ch1-cell

NECROSIS BROTHERS:• Liquefactive (Brain)• Gangrenous (Extremities, Bowel, non-specific)

– WET– DRY

• Fibrinoid (Rheumatoid, non-specific)• Caseous (cheese) (Tuberculosis)• Fat (Breast, any fat)• Ischemic (non-specific)• Avascular (aseptic), radiation, organ specific,

papillary• OneLook lists 153 terms preceding the word

“necrosis”: http://www.onelook.com/?w=*necrosis&ls=a

Page 38: Minarcik robbins 2013_ch1-cell

LIQUEFACTIVE NECROSIS, BRAIN

Page 39: Minarcik robbins 2013_ch1-cell

MORE LIQUID MORE WATER MORE PROTONS

Page 40: Minarcik robbins 2013_ch1-cell

CASEOUS NECROSIS, TB

Page 41: Minarcik robbins 2013_ch1-cell

FIBRINOID NECROSIS

Page 42: Minarcik robbins 2013_ch1-cell

“WET” GANGRENE

Page 43: Minarcik robbins 2013_ch1-cell

“DRY” GANGRENE

Page 44: Minarcik robbins 2013_ch1-cell

EXAMPLES of Cell INJURY/NECROSIS

• Ischemic (Hypoxic)

• Ischemia/Reperfusion

• Chemical

Page 45: Minarcik robbins 2013_ch1-cell

ISCHEMIC INJURY•REVERSIBLE IRREVERSIBLE

•DEATH (INFARCT)

Page 46: Minarcik robbins 2013_ch1-cell

ISCHEMIA/RE-PERFUSION INJURY

NEW Damage “Theory”

Page 47: Minarcik robbins 2013_ch1-cell

CHEMICAL INJURY• “Toxic” Chemicals, e.g CCl4 • Drugs, e.g tylenol• Dose Relationship• Free radicals, organelle, DNA

damage

Page 48: Minarcik robbins 2013_ch1-cell

APOPTOSIS•NORMAL (preprogrammed)

•PATHOLOGIC (associated with Necrosis)

Page 49: Minarcik robbins 2013_ch1-cell

“NORMAL” APOPTOSIS• Embryogenesis

• Hormonal “Involution”

• Cell population control, e.g., “crypts”

• Post Inflammatory “Clean-up”

• Elimination of “HARMFUL” cells

• Cytotoxic T-Cells cleaning up

Page 50: Minarcik robbins 2013_ch1-cell

“PATHOLOGIC” APOPTOSIS

• “Toxic” effect on cells, e.g., chemicals, pathogens

• Duct obstruction

• Tumor cells

• Apoptosis/Necrosis spectrum

Page 51: Minarcik robbins 2013_ch1-cell

APOPTOSIS MORPHOLOGY

• DE-crease in cell size, i.e., shrinkage

• IN-crease in chromatin concentration, i.e., hyperchromasia, pyknosis karyorhexis karyolysis

• IN-crease in membrane “blebs”

• Phagocytosis

Page 52: Minarcik robbins 2013_ch1-cell

SHRINKAGE/HYPERCHROMASIA

Page 53: Minarcik robbins 2013_ch1-cell

PHAGOCYTOSIS

Page 54: Minarcik robbins 2013_ch1-cell

APOPTOSIS BIOCHEMISTRY

• Protein Digestion (Caspases)

• DNA breakdown

• Phagocytic Recognition

Page 55: Minarcik robbins 2013_ch1-cell

SUB-Cellular Responses to Injury(APOPTOSIS/NECROSIS)

• Lysosomal Auto-Digestion• Smooth Endoplasmic Reticulum (SER)

activation

• Mitochondrial “SWELLING”• Cytoskeleton Breakdown

– Thin Filaments (actin, myosin)– Microtubules– Intermediate Filaments (keratin, desmin,

vimentin, neurofilaments, glial filaments)

Page 56: Minarcik robbins 2013_ch1-cell

INTRAcellular ACCUMULATIONS

• Lipids– Neutral Fat

– Cholesterol

• “Hyaline” = any “proteinaceous” pink “glassy” substance

• Glycogen

• Pigments (EX-ogenous, END-ogenous)

• Calcium

Page 57: Minarcik robbins 2013_ch1-cell

LIPID LAW•ALL Lipids are YELLOW grossly and WASHED out (CLEAR) microscopically

Page 58: Minarcik robbins 2013_ch1-cell

FATTY LIVER

Page 59: Minarcik robbins 2013_ch1-cell

FATTY LIVER

Page 60: Minarcik robbins 2013_ch1-cell
Page 61: Minarcik robbins 2013_ch1-cell

PIGMENTSEX-ogenous--- (tattoo, Anthracosis)

END-ogenous--- they all look the same, (e.g., hemosiderin, melanin, lipofucsin, bile), in that they are all golden yellowish brown on “routine” Hematoxylin & Eosin (H&E) stains

Page 62: Minarcik robbins 2013_ch1-cell

TATTOO, MICROSCOPIC

Page 63: Minarcik robbins 2013_ch1-cell

ANTHRACOSIS

Page 64: Minarcik robbins 2013_ch1-cell

Hemosiderin/Melanin/etc.

Page 65: Minarcik robbins 2013_ch1-cell

CALCIFICATION• DYSTROPHIC (LOCAL

CAUSES) (often with FIBROSIS)

• METASTATIC (SYSTEMIC CAUSES)–HYPERPARATHYROIDISM

–“METASTATIC*” Disease

*NOT to be confused with “metastatic” calcification

Page 66: Minarcik robbins 2013_ch1-cell

CELL AGING parallels ORGANISMAL AGING

PROGRAMMED THEORY (80%)

vs.

WEAR AND TEAR THEORY (20%)