Title: SECTION 2 CELL INJURY
1SECTION 2 CELL INJURY
2Cellular Swelling Fatty Change Hyaline
Change Amyloid Change Mucoid Change Pathologic
Pigmentation Pathologic Calcification
Degeneration
Cell Death
3Reversible Cell Injury
Degeneration
- Intracellular /or extracellular abnormal
accumulation - Excess amounts of various normal substances
(water,lipids,proteins,pigments) - Abnormal substances (exogenous, endogenous)
4Cellular Swelling
(1)
(hydropic degeneration)
- Intracellular accumulation
- Sodium
- Water
5Cellular Swelling
(2)
Morphology
the organs
NE
- Cloudy swelling
- Increase in the weight
the cells
LM
- Large
- Small fine granules in the cytoplasm
Ballooning change
- Swelling
- Endoplasmic reticulum
- Mitochondria
EM
6Injurious agents
Mechanism
Mitochondria damage
Cellular swelling
7Fatty Change
(1)
Steatosis
- Intracellular abnormal accumulation
- Triglycerides
Often occurred in the liver and the heart
8Fatty Change
(2)
Morphology
NE
Fat vacuoles
LM
- Round, clear vacuoles
- Orange-red color by staining with Sudan ? or Oil
Red O (Frozen tissue sections!)
Liposomes
EM
- Membrane-bound inclusions
9Fatty Change of the Liver
(1)
NE
- Mild fatty change
- Not affect the gross appearance
- With progressive accumulation
Fatty Liver Severe diffuse fatty change
10Fatty Change of the Liver
(2)
LM
Fat vacuoles
Small , in the cytoplasm around the
nucleus
Displacing the nucleus to the cell periphery
Fatty cysts
11Fatty Change of the Liver
(3)
Mechanism
12Fatty Change of the Myocardium
NE
- Mild fatty change
- Not affect the gross appearance
- With progressive accumulation
Tigered effect
Apparent bands of yellowed myocardium alternating
with bands of dark,red-brown,uninvolved
myocardium
13Hyaline Change
(1)
A descriptive morphologic term
- Intracellular or extracellular abnormal
accumulation - Proteins
- A homogeneous, translucent, pink appearance in
HE staining
14Hyaline Change
(2)
- Hyaline change in arteriolosclerosis
- e.g. Hypertension, Diabetes
- Hyaline change in connective tissues
- e.g. Old scars
- Hyaline change within the cytoplasm
- e.g. Nephrotic syndrome, Russell bodies,
Mallory body
15Amyloidosis
- Extracellular abnormal accumulation
- Amyloid
16Physicochemical characteristics of amyloid
- Iodine--- a brown color--- H2SO4 --- blue
- Staining Congo red--- red,
- HE--- homogeneous pink
- EM nonbranching fibrils 7.5-10 nm wide
- X-ray a pleated ?sheet structure
- (rendering protein very resistant to
- enzymatic degradation, contributing
- to its accumulation in tissues)
17Mucoid Change
- Extracellular abnormal accumulation
- Mucopolysaccharide
- (Glycosaminoglycans, Hyaluronic Acid)
18Pathologic Pigmentation
Intracellular extracellular abnormal
accumulation
Colored substances
19Pathologic Pigmentation
- Hemosiderin
- Lipofuscin
- Melanin
20Pathologic Calcification
(1)
- Except for the bones and teeth
- Pathologic conditions
- Intracellular extracellular abnormal
accumulation - Calcium salts
21Pathologic Calcification
(2)
- Dystrophic Calcification
- In areas of necrosis
- No calcium metabolic derangements
- Metastatic calcification
- In normal tissues
- Some calcium metabolic derangements
22Irreversible Cell Injury
Cell Death
1. Necrosis
A sequence of morphologic changes that follow
cell death in living tissue
2. Apoptosis
A distinctive and important mode of cell death
regulated by genes
23Necrosis
(1)
- Two essentially concurrent processes to produce
the morphologic changes - 1. Enzymatic digestion of the cell
- 2. Denaturation of proteins
Autolysis Heterolysis
24Necrosis
(2)
- Basic pathologic changes
- Types of necrosis
- Sequences of necrosis
25Necrosis
(3)
Pyknosis
Karyorrhexis
Karyolysis
Increased eosinophilia
26Necrosis
(4)
27Coagulative Necrosis
- A mass of coagulated, pink-staining, homogeneous
cytoplasm - Preservation of the basic structure outline of
the coagulated cell or tissue for several days - In solid organs (kidney, heart, spleen )
28Liquefactive Necrosis
- Liquefaction of necrotic cells
- Condition Presence of more abundant proteolytic
enzymes - Most often in suppurative inflammation in the
brain
29Caseous Necrosis
- A distinctive form of coagulative necrosis
- Cheese-like
- An amorphous coarsely granular eosinophilic
debris - Most often in foci of TB
30Fat Necrosis
- A special type of liquefactive necrosis
- Focal areas of fat destruction
- Calcium soaps
- Enzymatic fat necrosis(acute pancreatitis)
- Nonenzymatic fat necrosis (following direct
trauma to adipose tissue extracellular
liberation of fat)
31Gangrene
- Extensive tissue necrosis
- Secondary bacterial infection
- Dry gangrene
- Wet gangrene
- Gas gangrene
32Fibrinoid Necrosis
- A type of connective tissue necrosis
- Loss of normal structure
- A homogeneous,bright pink-staining necrotic
material that resembles fibrin microscopically
33Necrosis
(5)
Ulcer, Cavity, Sinus, Fistula
- Organization encapsulation