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Cellular Reaction to  Injury Cellular Reaction to  Injury

Cellular Reaction to Injury - PowerPoint Presentation

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Cellular Reaction to Injury - PPT Presentation

ADAPTATION TO ENVIRONMENTAL STRESS Lab2amp3 Proliferative endometrium A A section of the uterus from a woman of reproductive age reveals a thick endometrium composed of proliferative glands in an abundant ID: 915304

cell necrosis cells cellular necrosis cell cellular cells death normal tissue accumulations injury liver macrophages pigment patient left image

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Slide1

Cellular Reaction to

Injury

ADAPTATION

TO ENVIRONMENTAL STRESS

Lab:2&3

Slide2

Proliferative endometrium

A. A section of the uterus from a woman of reproductive age reveals a thick endometrium composed of proliferative glands in an abundant stroma. B. The endometrium of a 75-year-old woman (shown at the same magnifi cation) is thin and contains only a few atrophic and cystic glands.

A

B

Slide3

Hyperplasia

. A. Normal epidermis. B. Epidermal hyperplasia in psoriasis, shown at the same magnification as in A. The epidermis is thickened, owing to an increase in the number of squamous cells.

A

B

Slide4

Squamous

metaplasia .A section of endocervix shows the normal columnar epithelium at both margins and a focus of squamousmetaplasia in the center

.

Slide5

Dysplasia

Dysplastic epithelium of the uterine cervix lacks normal polarity, and individual cells show hyperchromatic nuclei and a greater than normal nucleus-to-cytoplasm ratio. Normal cervical epithelium is at left. Compare, for example, the size and hyperchromaticity of nuclei in the dysplastic cells with the characteristics of normal counterparts at comparable height in the adjacent normal cervix. In dysplasia, cellular arrangement is disorderly, largely lacking appropriate

histologic

maturation, from the basal layers to the surface.

Slide6

Cell AdaptationsSome of these skeletal muscle fibers here show atrophy, compared to normal fibers. The number of cells is the same as before the atrophy occurred, but the size of some fibers is reduced. This is a response to injury by "downsizing" to conserve the cell. In this case, innervation to the small, atrophic fibers was lost. (This is a

trichrome stain.)

Slide7

Cell AdaptationsThe testis at the right has undergone atrophy and is much smaller than the normal testis at the left.

Slide8

Cell Adaptations

cerebral atrophy in a patient with Alzheimer disease. The entire size of the brain is reduced, but some parts are more affected than others. The gyri are narrowed and the intervening sulci are widened, most pronounced toward the frontal lobe region.

Slide9

Cell Adaptations

Cardiac hypertrophy involving the left ventricle. The number of myocardial fibers does not increase, but their size can increase in response to an increased workload, leading to the marked thickening of the left ventricle in this patient with systemic hypertension.

Slide10

Cell Adaptations

The prominent folds of endometrium in this uterus opened to reveal the endometrial cavity are an example of hyperplasia. Cells forming both the endometrial glands and the stroma have increased in number. As a result, the size of the

endometrium has increased. This increase is physiologic with a normal menstrual cycle.

Slide11

Cell Adaptations

prostatic hyperplasia. The normal adult male prostate is about 3 to 4 cm in diameter and up to 25 gm in weight. The number of prostatic glands, as well as the stroma, has increased in this enlarged prostate seen in transverse section, and as a result, the entire prostate has increased in size. The pattern of increase here is not uniform, but nodular. This increase is in response to hormonal action on the cells, but in this case is not a normal physiologic process, but a pathologic process that could interfere with emptying of the urinary bladder.

Slide12

Cell Adaptations

One of the nodules of hyperplastic prostate, with many glands along with some intervening stroma. The cells making up the glands are normal in appearance, but there are just too many of them.

Slide13

Cell Adaptations

Metaplasia of laryngeal respiratory epithelium has occurred here in a smoker. The chronic irritation has led to an exchanging of one type of epithelium (the normal respiratory epithelium at the right) for another (the more resilient squamous epithelium at the left). Metaplasia

is not a normal physiologic process and may be the first step toward neoplasia

.

Slide14

Cell Adaptations

Metaplasia of the normal esophageal squamous mucosa has occurred here, with the appearance of gastric type columnar mucosa.

Slide15

Cell Adaptations

Cellular dysplasia in the uterine cervix. The normal cervical squamous epithelium has become transformed to a more disorderly growth pattern, or dysplastic epithelium. This is farther down the road toward neoplasia, but dysplasia is still a potentially reversible process.

Slide16

Necrosis

Represents the death of living cells due to irreversible cell injury. Depending on the tissue involved, necrosis will assume one of several morphologic patterns associated with the processes involved in cell death

Slide17

Coagulative

Necrosis. H&E, 97is a form of necrosis characterized by preservation of cellular outlines. include necrosis of cardiac myocytes in myocardial infarction and renal necrosis.Image: shows global coagulative necrosis in a transplanted kidney due to compromised perfusion after the transplant. Note the preserved architecture with the glomerulus in the center surrounded by renal tubules. Note also the pale eosinophilic staining with lack of nuclear staining

Slide18

Liquefactive Necrosis. H&E, 48

may be seen after bacterial infections or infarcts involving the central nervous system.Image: shows liquefactive necrosis in an infarcted area of the brain. Note : the intact white matter in the lower portion of the image and the granular liquefactive necrosis in the upper portion of the image

Slide19

Caseous

Necrosis. H&E, 97 is a form of necrosis characterized by obliteration of the underlying tissue architecture and the formation of amorphous granular necrotic debris, which grossly appears “cheesy,” hence the name caseous. is highly characteristic of infection with M. tuberculosis and certain fungi and is a type of granulomatous infl ammation.Image: shows a lymph node biopsy with granulomatous inflammation and necrosis (to the right of the dashed line) in a patient with H.

capsulatum infection.

Slide20

Fat Necrosis. H&E, 193

is a specific type of necrosis seen in fatty, or adipose, tissue. Damage to adipocytes causes release of lipids and cell death followed by aggregates of foamy macrophages containing the released lipids. is seen in damage to fatty tissue by trauma as well as enzymatic digestion as seen in acute pancreatitis.Image: shows fat necrosis in subcutaneous adipose tissue after previous surgery. Note the abundant foamy macrophages containing lipid droplets

Slide21

Pigments

Pigments are colored substances found within tissue macrophages or parenchymal cells. Pigments may be endogenous, those produced by the body, or exogenous, those originating outside of the body. Melanin, lipofuscin, and hemosiderin

are the most common endogenous pigments. The most common exogenous pigment

is carbon.

Slide22

Anthracosis

. H&E, 155 is an exogenous pigment composed of carbonaceous material from smoking and air pollution. Inhaled carbon is taken up by alveolar macrophages and transported to lymph nodes. Anthracotic tissues are black in gross appearance.Image:

This lymph node from the hilar region of the lung shows abundant macrophages containing black carbonaceous material.

Slide23

Melanin

. H&E, 388is a product of melanocytes, can normally be seen in the basal keratinocytes of the skin. In some chronic inflammatory skin conditions, melanin is released into the dermis and taken up by dermal macrophages, or melanophages.Image: Black-brown melanin pigment is present within the papillary dermal macrophages.

Slide24

Lipofuscin

. H&E, 388Also known as lipochrome, lipofuscin is a yellow-brown pigment related to tissue aging . is insoluble and composed of phospholipids and lipids as a result of lipid peroxidation. It is commonly seen in the liver and heart.Image

: This hypertrophic cardiac myocyte

from an older individual contains lipofuscin

granules adjacent to the nucleus.

Slide25

Hemosiderin

. H&E, 155 (left); Prussian blue, 155 (right) is the tissue storage form of iron, which appears as granular, coarse, golden-brown pigment. is formed from the breakdown of red blood cells and is taken up into tissue macrophages. It may be seen in tissues in which remote bleeding has occurred or in any condition in which excess iron is presentImages: The image (left) shows abundant hemosiderin-laden

macrophages in soft tissue where past bleeding has occurred.

The image (right) is the same tissue, showing the deep blue staining of hemosiderin.

Slide26

Ulcer . H&E, 25

represents the discontinuity of an epithelial surface, which may involve skin or mucous membranes. may be caused by infectious processes, chemical exposures, prolonged pressure, or vascular compromise. They typically form crater-shaped lesions with a superficial fibrinopurulent layer and an underlying vascular and fibroblastic proliferation called granulation tissue.

Image: is a gastric ulcer.

Note the intact mucosa transitioning to the ulcer with a

fibrinopurulent surface. The formation of gastric ulcers is closely associated with infection with

H. pylori. Gastric ulcers may be benign or malignant, representing

gastric

adenocarcinoma

.

Slide27

Hydropic

swellingA needle biopsy of the liver of a patient with toxic hepatic injury shows severe hydropic swelling in the centrilobular

zone. The affected hepatocytes exhibit central nuclei and cytoplasm distended (ballooned) by excess fluid.

Slide28

Cell Adaptations

the centrilobular portion of liver next to a central vein. The cells have reduced in size or been lost from hypoxia. The pale brown-yellow pigment is lipochrome that has accumulated as the atrophic and dying cells undergo

autophagocytosis

Slide29

Cell Death

Apoptosis is a more orderly process of cell death. It is individual cell necrosis, not simultaneous localized necrosis of large numbers of cells. In this example, hepatocytes are dying individually (arrows) from injury through infection by viral hepatitis. The apoptotic cells are enlarged, pink from loss of cytoplasmic

detail, and without nuclei. The cell nucleus and cytoplasm become fragmented as enzymes such as caspases

destroy cellular components

Slide30

Cell Death

In this fetal thymus there is involution of thymic lymphocytes by the mechanism of apoptosis. In this case, it is an orderly process and part of normal immune system maturation. Individual cells fragment and are consumed by phagocytes to give the appearance of clear spaces filled with cellular debris. Apoptosis is controlled by many mechanisms. Genes such as BCL-2 are turned off and Bax

genes turned on. Intracellular proteolytic

enzymes called caspases

produce much cellular breakdown.

Slide31

Cell Death

When there is marked cellular injury, there is cell death and necrosis. This microscopic appearance of myocardium shown here is a mess because so many cells have died that the tissue is not recognizable. Many nuclei have become pyknotic (shrunken and dark) and have then undergone karorrhexis (fragmentation) and

karyolysis (dissolution). The cytoplasm and cell borders are no longer recognizable. In this case, loss of the blood supply from a major coronary artery led to ischemia and cell death.

Slide32

Cell Adaptations

Here is myocardium in which the cells are dying as a result of ischemic injury from coronary artery occlusion. This is early in the process of necrosis. The nuclei of the myocardial fibers are being lost. The cytoplasm is losing its structure, because no well-defined cross-striations are seen.

Slide33

Cell Death

When many cells undergo necrosis at once, then definable patterns of necrosis are produced, depending upon the nature of the injury, the type of tissue, and the length of time. This is an example of coagulative necrosis. This is the typical pattern with ischemia and infarction (loss of blood supply and resultant tissue anoxia). Here, there is a wedge-shaped pale area of coagulative

necrosis (infarction) in the cortex of the kidney.

Slide34

Cell Death

Microscopically, the renal cortex has undergone anoxic injury at the left so that the cells appear pale and ghost-like. There is a hemorrhagic zone in the middle where the cells are dying or have not quite died along with damaged blood vessels that are leaking, and then normal renal parenchyma at the far right. This is an example of coagulative necrosis.

Slide35

Cell Death

The contrast between normal adrenal cortex and the small pale infarct is good. The area just under the capsule is spared because of blood supply from capsular arterial branches. This is an odd place for an infarct, but it illustrates the shape and appearance of an ischemic (pale) infarct well.

Slide36

Cell Death

Two large infarctions (areas of coagulative necrosis) are seen in this sectioned spleen. Since the etiology of coagulative necrosis is usually vascular with loss of blood supply, the infarct occurs in a vascular distribution. Thus, infarcts are often wedge-shaped with a base on the organ capsule.

Slide37

Cell Death

A large portion of the small intestine is infarcted. The dark red to grey infarcted bowel contrasts with the pale pink normal bowel at the bottom. Some organs such as bowel with

anastomosing blood supplies, or liver with a dual blood

suppy, are harder to infarct. This bowel was caught in a hernia and the mesenteric blood supply was constricted by the small opening to the hernia sac.

Slide38

Cell Death

The two lung abscesses seen here are examples of liquefactive necrosis in which there is a liquid center in an area of tissue injury. One abscess appears in the upper lobe and one in the lower lobe. Liquefactive necrosis is typical of organs in which the tissues have a lot of lipid (such as brain) or when there is an abscess with lots of acute inflammatory cells whose release of proteolytic enzymes destroys the surrounding tissues

Slide39

Cell Death

The liver shows a small abscess here filled with many neutrophils. This abscess is an example of localized liquefactive necrosis. Grossly, such an abscess appears yellow to tan because it is filled with pus (purulent exudate).

Slide40

Cell Death

This is liquefactive necrosis in the brain of a patient who suffered a "stroke" with focal loss of blood supply to a portion of cerebrum. This type of infarction leads to necrosis which is marked by loss of neurons and neuroglial cells and the formation of a clear space at the center left. As it resolves, the liquefied area becomes a cystic space.

Slide41

Cell Death

At high magnification, liquefactive necrosis of the brain demonstrates many macrophages at the right which are cleaning up the necrotic cellular debris. The job description of a macrophage includes janitorial services such as this, particularly when there is lipid debris.

Slide42

Cell Death

Grossly, the cerebral infarction at the upper left here demonstrates liquefactive necrosis. Eventually, the removal of the dead tissue leaves behind a cavity.

Slide43

Cell Death

As this infarct in the brain is organizing and being resolved, the liquefactive necrosis leads to resolution with cystic spaces.

Slide44

Cell Death

Fat necrosis of the pancreas. Cellular injury to the pancreatic acini leads to release of powerful enzymes which damage fat by the production of soaps, and these appear grossly as the soft, chalky white areas seen here on the cut surfaces.

Slide45

Cell Death

Microscopically, fat necrosis adjacent to pancreas is seen here. There are some remaining steatocytes at the left which are not necrotic. The necrotic fat cells at the right have vague cellular outlines, have lost their peripheral nuclei, and their cytoplasm has become a pink amorphous mass of necrotic material.

Slide46

Cell Death

Gross appearance of caseous necrosis in a hilar lymph node infected with tuberculosis. The node has a cheesy tan to white appearance. is really just a combination of

coagulative and liquefactive necrosis that is most characteristic of granulomatous inflammation.

Slide47

Cell Death

More extensive caseous necrosis, with confluent cheesy tan granulomas in the upper portion of this lung in a patient with tuberculosis. The tissue destruction is so extensive that there are areas of cavitation (cystic spaces) being formed as the necrotic (mainly liquefied) debris drains out via the bronchi.

Slide48

Cell Death

Microscopically, caseous necrosis is characterized by acellular pink areas of necrosis, as seen here at the upper right, surrounded by a

granulomatous inflammatory process.

Slide49

Cell Death

This is gangrene, or necrosis of many tissues in a body part. In this case, the toes were involved in a frostbite injury. This is an example of "dry" gangrene in which there is mainly coagulative necrosis from the anoxic injury.

Slide50

Cell Death

This is gangrene of the lower extremity. In this case the term "wet" gangrene is more applicable because of the liquefactive component from superimposed infection in addition to the coagulative necrosis from loss of blood supply. This patient had diabetes mellitus with severe peripheral vascular disease.

Slide51

Cell Death

Gangrenous necrosis involves the tissues of a body part. The inflammation seen here is extending beneath the skin of a toe to involve soft tissue (fat and connective tissue at the right) and bone (at the left). Because multiple tissues are non-viable, amputation of such areas is necessary.

Slide52

Cellular Accumulations

Cytoplasmic organelle damage leads to a variety of injury patterns, most of which are best seen by electron microscopy. Acute injuries tend to damage an entire cell, so specific organelle damage is beside the point. However, in some cases the damage can be cumulative over many years. Here are Mallory bodies (the red globular material) composed of cytoskeletal filaments in liver cells chronically damaged from alcoholism. These are a type of "intermediate" filament between the size of

actin (thin) and myosin (thick).

Slide53

Cellular Accumulations

Here are neurofibrillary tangles in neurons of a patient with Alzheimer's disease. The cytoskeletal filaments are grouped together in the elongated pink tangles.

Slide54

Cellular Accumulations

Intracellular accumulations of a variety of materials can occur in response to cellular injury. Here is steatosis, or fatty metamorphosis (fatty change) of the liver in which deranged lipoprotein metabolism from injury leads to accumulation of lipid in the cytoplasm of hepatocytes. Note the large, clear lipid droplets that fill the cytoplasm of many

hepatocytes.

Slide55

Cellular Accumulations

The liver injury with chronic alcoholism leads to fibrosis and regeneration of the hepatocytes in nodules. This firm, nodular appearance of the liver as seen here is called cirrhosis.

Slide56

Cellular Accumulations

This Congo red stain reveals amorphous orange-red deposits of amyloid, which is an abnormal accumulation of breakdown products of proteinaceous material that can collect within cells and tissues.

Slide57

Cellular Accumulations

Sometimes cellular injury can lead to accumulation of a specific product. Here, the red globules seen in this PAS stained section of liver are accumulations of alpha-1-antitrypsin in a patient with a congenital defect involving cellular metabolism and release of this substance.

Slide58

Cellular Accumulations

Many inherited disorders of metabolism involve enzymes in degradation pathways. A deficiency of such an enzyme can lead to accumulation of intermediate metabolites that accumulate as storage products in cells, as seen here with Gaucher disease involving spleen. The large pale cells contain an accumulated storage product from lack of the

glucocerebrosidase enzyme.

Slide59

Cellular Accumulations

The yellow-brown granular pigment seen in the hepatocytes here is lipochrome (lipofuscin) which accumulates over time in cells (particularly liver and heart) as a result of "wear and tear" with aging.

Slide60

Cellular Accumulations

The brown coarsely granular material in macrophages in this alveolus is hemosiderin that has accumulated as a result of the breakdown of RBC's and release of the iron in heme. The macrophages clear up this debris, which is eventually recycled.

Slide61

Cellular Accumulations

A Prussian blue reaction is seen in this iron stain of the liver to demonstrate large amounts of hemosiderin that are present within the cytoplasm of the hepatocytes and Kupffer cells. Ordinarily, only a small amount of

hemosiderin would be present in the fixed macrophage-like cells in liver, the

Kupffer cells, as part of iron recycling.

Slide62

Cellular Accumulations

These renal tubules contain large amounts of hemosiderin, as demonstrated by the Prussian blue iron stain. This patient had chronic hematuria.

Slide63

Cellular Accumulations

The sclera of the eye is yellow because the patient has jaundice, or icterus. The normally white sclerae of the eyes is a good place on physical examination to look for icterus

.

Slide64

Cellular Accumulations

The yellow-green globular material seen within small bile ductules in the liver is bilirubin pigment. This is hepatic cholestasis. A problem with excretion of bile, or an obstruction to flow of bile, could cause this appearance. This patient would exhibit jaundice.

Slide65

Cellular Accumulations

Increased amounts of circulating bilirubin in the blood can lead to the physical examination finding of "icterus" or jaundice as seen here from the yellowish hue of the skin. The easiest place to see icterus is on the sclera of the eye.

Slide66

Cellular Accumulations

The black streaks seen between lobules of lung beneath the pleural surface are due to accumulation of anthracotic pigment. This anthracosis of the lung is not harmful and comes from the carbonaceous material breathed in from dirty air typical of industrialized regions of the planet. Persons who smoke would have even more of this pigment.

Slide67

Cellular Accumulations

Here is anthracotic pigment in macrophages in a hilar lymph node. Anthracosis is nothing more than accumulation of carbon pigment from breathing dirty air. Smokers have the most pronounced

anthracosis. The

anthracotic pigment looks bad, but it causes no major organ dysfunction.

Slide68

Cellular Accumulations

This is dystrophic calcification in the wall of the stomach. At the far left is an artery with calcification in its wall. There are also irregular bluish-purple deposits of calcium in the submucosa. Calcium is more likely to be deposited in tissues that are damaged.

Slide69

Cellular Accumulations

Here is so-called "metastatic calcification" in the lung of a patient with a very high serum calcium level (hypercalcemia)