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Detection of Cellular Changes After Injury   By: Light microscopy or gross examination  detect changes hours to days after injury Histochemical or ultrastructural techniques  detect changes minutes to hours after injury Patterns of Acute Cell Injury  Reversible Injury  Cellular swelling: Ultrastructural changes     plasma membrane blebbing, blunting and distortion of microvilli mitochondrial swelling, phospholipid-rich amorphous densities dilation of endoplasmic reticulum with detachment of ribosomes and dissociation of polysomes disaggregation of granular and fibrillar elements on nucleus Patterns of Acute Cell Injury Reversible Injury  Fatty change: 2.      Vacuolation of cells due to accumulation of lipid droplets Results due to disturbance of ribosomal function The liver is commonly affected Occurs in hypoxic injury, toxic (alcohol), metabolic (diabetes mellitus) Moderate fatty changes are reversible, but sever changes may not be Patterns of Acute Cell Injury Irreversible injury:   Cell death It is suggested that cell membrane is the central factor in the pathogenesis of irreversible cell injury Also due to:    sever mitochondrial dysfunction lysosomal rupture Two patterns of cell death:   Necrosis Apoptosis Patterns of Acute Cell Injury Irreversible injury: Cell death  1. Necrosis: Definition:  sequence of morphologic changes that follow cell death in living tissue The morphologic appearance of necrosis is due to:    Enzymatic digestion of cell:  Autolysis: hydrolytic enzymes are derived from the dead cells themselves  Heterolysis: hydrolytic enzymes are derived from invading inflammatory cells Denaturation of proteins Patterns of Acute Cell Injury  Microscopic appearance of Necrotic dead cells:  Cytoplasmic changes   eosinophilia (pink) increased  due to eosin binding to denatured proteins  Decreased basophilia (blue) – mainly imparted by RNA  Glassy homogenous cytoplasm  due to loss of glycogen  Clacification may occur late Nuclear changes  due to break down of DNA  Karyolysis: decrease basophilia of chromatin  Pyknosis: nuclear shrinkage and increased basophilia  Karyorrhexis: fragmentation of pyknotic nucleus Kidney, necrosis of tubular cells Patterns of Acute Cell Injury  Specific Morphologic Patterns of Necrosis  Coagulative necrosis  Liquefactive necrosis  Gangrenous necrosis  Caseous necrosis  Fat necrosis  Others (fibrinoid necrosis) Specific Morphologic Patterns of Necrosis Coagulative Necrosis: 1.  Preservation of the structural outline of the dead (coagulated) cell for days  The most common form of necrosis (particularly in myocardium, liver, kidney)  characteristic of hypoxic cell death in all tissues except in the brain  Myocardial infarction is a very good example  Mechanism: denaturation of proteins and enzymes  blocking cellular proteolysis  preserve cell outline Specific Morphologic Patterns of Necrosis  Morphology of Coagulative Necrosis:  Gross: pale color, normal firm texture at the beginning  become soft later due to digestion by macrophages (may lead to rupture of infarcted myocardium)  Microscopic: first few hours  no abnormalities later  progressive loss of nuclear staining, with preservation of cell boundaries finally  damaged cells are removed by macrophages (the presence of necrotic tissue usually evokes inflammatory response followed by repair) Fate of Necrosis  Most of necrotic tissue is removed by leukocyte (Phagocytosis) combined with extracellular enzyme digestion  If necrotic tissue is not eliminated  it attracts Ca++ salts  dystrophic calcification Patterns of Acute Cell Injury  Apoptosis (a falling away from)  Definition:   Programmed cell death It is an active (energy-dependant) programmed single cell death to delete the unwanted or defective cells It has an important role in physiological processes and pathological conditions Apoptosis   Physiological processes:  during embryogenesis (implantation, organogenesis, developmental involution, separation of digits in limb development)  hormone -dependent involution (endometrium during menstruation, lactating breast after weaning)  cell deletion in proliferating populations  intestinal crypt epithelium  deletion of autoreactive T cells in thymus (failure might result in autoimmunity) Pathological conditions:  pathologic atrophy-prostate after castration (hormone -dependent involution)  Cell death in tumors  Cell death induced by cytotoxic drugs and ionizing radiation  Councilman’s bodies due to viral hepatitis Apoptosis Morphology:  Involves single cells or small clusters  Cells shrink rapidly, retain intact plasma membrane  Formation of cytoplasmic buds  Fragmentation into apoptotic bodies  Apoptotic bodies phagocytosed or rapidly degraded  No inflammatory response  Entire process from 5 to 30 minutes Apoptosis Necrosis Vs Apoptosis Necrosis  Grp of cells or part of tissue  passive process  Always pathologic  Mechanism is ATP depletion, mb damage  Histology: coagulation. liquefaction  inflammation Apoptosis:  Single cell death in living tissue  Active process  Physiologic or pathologic  Endonucleases  Apoptotic bodies  No inflammation