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Regeneration of injured cells by cells of same type, for example regeneration of skin/oral mucosa Replacement by fibrous tissue (fibroplasia, scar formation) Both require cell growth, differentiation, and cell-matrix interaction
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Varieties of Proliferative Potential Stable (quiescent) cells: ◦ Normally little proliferation but remain capable of more rapid cell division following injury. ◦ Liver, kidney, pancreas, endothelium, fibroblasts ◦ Chances of regeneration are GOOD
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Varieties of Proliferative Potential Labile (always dividing) cells: ◦ Replace dying cells ◦ Epithelial cells of the skin, oral cavity, exocrine ducts, and GI tract; endometrial and bone marrow cells. ◦ Chances of regeneration are EXCELLENT
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Varieties of Proliferative Potential Permanent (non-dividing ) cells: ◦ Not capable of proliferation. ◦ Irreversible injury leads only to scar ◦ Nerve cells, myocardium, skeletal muscle,
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Cell Cycle
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Cell Signaling Patterns Autocrine = ligand is secreted and detected by same cell Paracrine = ligand is secreted and separately detected by neighboring cells Endocrine = ligands (usually hormones) are secreted into the vasculature to affect distant target cells
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Wound healing
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Healing by first intension (primary) This occurs in clean, incised wound with good apposition of the edges.
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24 hours
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3 to 7 days
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WEEKs
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Healing by second intension(secondary) This occurs in open wound, particularly when there has been significant loss of tissue, necrosis or infection
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24 hours
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3 to 7 days
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WEEKs
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FIBROSIS Fibrosis, in general, refers to any fibroblast proliferation with deposition of excess extracellular matrix which is mostly collagen. Leads to functional loss. It is the end result of wound healing
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This is a healing biopsy site on the skin seen a week following the excision, The skin surface has re- epithelialized, and below this is granulation tissue with small capillaries and fibroblasts forming collagen.
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Complications of Wounds Deficient scar formation – wound dehiscence/ ulceration Excess repair – keloid formation Excess contraction – joint contractures/ intra-abdominal adhesions
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