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Amos Rodger MWAKIGONJA, MD, MMed, PhD, FCPath ECSA Senior Lecturer
CELL INJURY Amos Rodger MWAKIGONJA, MD, MMed, PhD, FCPath ECSA Senior Lecturer
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Lecture objectives Define cell injury
Explain causes and classification Recognize the morphology of cell injury and distinguish between reversible & irreversible injury
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outline: Definition Classification Causes Morphology Mechanisms
Responses to cell injury/ cellular adaptations
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definition Cell injury refers to a sequence of events in a cell which follow when either Excessive physiologic stress or Pathologic stimuli It may be due to a variety of stresses a cell encounters in its Internal External environment surpass the limits of adaptive response or when adaptation to such stimuli is not possible.
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classification Cell injury can be reversible or
Irreversible if the stimulus persists or if it is Severe enough from the outset.
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causes Exogenous causes (external environment) e.g.
Physical agents Endogenous causes (internal environment) e.g. metabolic factors, etc. Congenital or Acquired
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list of the causes Physical agents: Mechanical trauma
Temperature extremes Sudden changes in atmospheric pressure Radiation Electric shock
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Chemical agents and drugs:
Innumerable chemicals inflict cell injury e.g. glucose, salt, oxygen, poisons like arsenic, cyanide, mercury, etc., pollutants, insecticides, herbicides, carbon monoxide, asbestos, alcohol, narcotics and therapeutic drugs. Infectious agents: Microbes parasites
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Immunologic reactions:
Double edged sword Defensive functions primarily but can be Injurious e.g. anaphylaxis and autoimmunity. Genetic derangements: germline or somatic Gross malformations e.g. Downs syndrome Subtle alterations at DNA level e.g. SCA Nutritional imbalances: Deficiencies e.g. PEM, avitaminosis Excesses e.g. hyperlipidemia (atherosclerosis), hypervitaminosis
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morphology Morphology of reversible injury: Light microscopy:
Cellular swelling due to inability to maintain homeostasis Fatty change in cells involved in and dependent on fat metabolism e.g. hepatocytes and myocardial cells; Intra-cytoplasmic lipid vacuoles Appearing in hypoxic and toxic injury
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Vacuolar degeneration Ultrastructural changes-
Hydropic change Vacuolar degeneration Ultrastructural changes- Plasma membrane alterations-blebbing, blunting, microvilli distortion, myelin figures, loosening of intercellular attachments Mitochondrial changes Dilation of endoplasmic reticulum Nuclear alterations Gross: organ pallor, turgor and increased weight
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Morphology of irreversible cell injury (Necrosis): Light microscopy:
Membrane rupture Dispersal of organelles Breakdown of lysosomes Nuclear changes- Karyolysis (DNA breakdown) Pyknosis (nuclear shrinkage) Karyorrhexis (nuclear fragmentation) Gross tissue changes: coagulative (denaturation), liquifactive (enzymatic digestion), caseous and fat necrosis.
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Mechanisms (Pathogenesis) of cell injury
Depends on: 1. Type, duration & severity of stress 2. Type, status & adaptability of target cell 3. Underlying intracellular phenomena-reversal mechanisms 4. Morphologic consequences
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Pathogenesis (continued)
For some injurious agents the biochemical platforms of attack is well defined, viz: Glycolysis Citric acid cycle and Oxidative phosphorylation in mitochondrial inner membranes.
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Common biochemical pathways of cell injury:
ATP depletion-ATP is produced by Oxidative phosphorylation and Glycolysis Oxygen & oxygen-derived free radicals (reactive oxygen species) Loss of calcium homeostasis (intracellular calcium accumulation) defects in selective membrane permiability-xteristic of all forms of cell injury.
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Responses to cell injury
Lysosomal catabolism-residual bodies, lipofuscin pigment granules, Induction (hypertrophy of smooth endoplasmic reticulum) Mitochondrial alterations-number, size, shape e.g. in cell hypertrophy and atrophy.
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IRREVERSIBLE CELL INJURY
This results in cell death and there are two types: Necrosis Infarction Apoptosis
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IRREVERSIBLE CELL INJURY
Types of necrosis Liquifactive Coagulative Caseous Traumatic fat necrosis, etc.
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Patterns of Necrosis In Tissues or Organs
As a result of cell death the tissues or organs display certain macroscopic changes: Coagulative necrosis: the outline of the dead cells are maintained and the tissue is somewhat firm. Example: myocardial infarction Liquifactive necrosis: the dead cells undergo disintegration and affected tissue is liquified. Example: cerebral infarction.
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Patterns of Necrosis In Tissues or Organs
Caseous necrosis: a form of coagulative necrosis (cheese-like). Example: tuberculosis lesions. Fat necrosis: enzymatic digestion of fat. Example: necrosis of fat by pancreatic enzymes. Gangrenous necrosis: Necrosis (secondary to ischemia) usually with superimposed infection. Example: necrosis of distal limbs, usually foot and toes in diabetes.
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