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Cell Death
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You have approximately 30 trillion red blood cells.
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Nearly 2 million die in the time that it takes to say this.
Why aren’t you anemic? Bone marrow replaces them
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Cells have a life span Different cells have different life spans
Ex. Esophagus maybe live hours, rbc may be 120 days
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From a cell point of view, it’s not what caused the cell death, but what’s happening in the cell
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Two Types of Cell Death:
Apoptosis: programmed cell death, “cell suicide”
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Apoptosis
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Necrosis: death caused by injury through trauma, virus, bacteria, toxins
We are looking at death caused by injurious agents
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Cell Injury All injuries have an effect the molecular level first
Cells are damaged long before injury is observed Ex. Heart attacks account for a huge amount of cell death, but you can’t see any structural changes in a cardio cell for approximately 12 hours We cannot tell the moment a cell dies
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Cells that undergo traumatic death resulting from acute cellular injury demonstrate a characteristic series of changes including the following:
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The cell and its organelles swell
Why? Cannot control water and ion regulation Cell contents leak out, leading to Inflammation of surrounding tissue
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Swelling Endoplasmic Reticulum: folded membranes swell apart and eventually rupture Ribosomes come off the rough ER Cannot see under a compound microscope Protein synthesis cannot occur even if cell is still alive What happens?
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Complete chaos If one chemical pathway is interrupted, all others will be affected
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Mitochondria: Swell and rupture
Cristae is lost No ATP production Cannot see this under a compound microscope
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Nucleus: Nucleus takes on an irregular look (“clumping”)
Nuclear envelope begins to break apart Normal nucleus looks smooth and homogenous We can see this under the microscope
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They do not kill the cell, they usually make dead cells go away
Lysosomes: rupture and release protein digesting enzymes that can destroy cells They do not kill the cell, they usually make dead cells go away Occurs often with infection, cuts
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What would happen if you left dead cells/tissue in an area of your body?
Fertile ground for massive infection
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Necrosis can be divided into the following:
Necrosis: includes all of the above changes that can be observed following “accidental” cell death Necrosis can be divided into the following: Autolysis Heterolysis
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Autolysis Cellular degradation caused by the cell’s own enzymes
Occurs when a lysosome allows the digestive enzymes out of its membrane Always occurs before heterolysis
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Normal Liver Histology
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Normal Liver
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Autolysis (Image 2)
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Autolysis (Image 3)
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Autolysis (Image 4)
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Characteristics of autolysis of liver cells
Disorganized intracellular material Granular appearance of cytoplasm Orange peel look White spots within the cytoplasm Fat Clumping of nuclear material
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Heterolysis Digestive enzymes are from other sources than the individual cell Usually leukocytes (white blood cells)
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