Cell Injury and Cell Death
Cell Injury and Cell Death
Learning Objectives:
Describe the ways cells adapt to stress and injury
Understand how cell injury occurs following hypoxia and ischemia
Summarise how oxidative stress causes cell injury
Differentiate between cell death via necrosis and apoptosis
Discuss the different classification of necrosis
Recognise pathological calcification
Pathology - the study of disease
Pathophysiology - the study of abnormal changes in the body
Pathogenesis - the sequence of events and changes in the tissue that lead to disease
Aetiology - the cause of disease
Congenital disease - present before birth
Acquired disease - acquired after birth
Acute disease - sudden appearance of symptoms and signs that lasts a short time
Idiopathic - the cause of the disease is unknown
clinical manifestations - signs and symptoms of a disease
sequelae - a condition that is the consequence of a previous disease, treatment, or injury
Cellular Adaptation
cells adapt to environmental stressors in order to protect themselves from injury
can be result of exposure to chemicals, toxins, hormones, or physical stressors
can be physiological or pathogenic
typically reversible
stressor continuous, adaptive capacity of cell exceeded, cell injury can develop leading to irreversible injury and cell death
Hypertrophy
Hyperplasia
Atrophy
Metaplasia
Dysplasia
Hypertrophy
Increase in cell size which results in increased size of organ
No new cells, existing cells larger
Seen in cells that have a limited capacity to divide
→ cardiac, skeletal muscle, uterus

Physiological hypertrophy
when muscle size increases with exercise or extreme muscle building
seen in uterus in pregnancy, which increases in size to accommodate growing foetus
both examples will go back to normal size without stressors of pregnancy or extreme exercise
Pathological hypertrophy
growth of cells caused by disease state
e.g. heart, left ventriclar hypertrophy, typically result of long term hypertension
heart compensate for increased BP and workload by getting bigger to produce higher contractile force
Hyperplasia
An increased number of cells produced by an organ
Generally occurs only in cells capable of replication, or organs with abundant stem cells

Physiological Hyperplasia
hormonal hyperplasia is seen in the proliferation of glandular tissue in the breast in puberty and pregnancy
compensatory hyperplasia where tissue regenerates after its removal or loss e.g. liver regeneration after resection, can manage with removal of 2/3 of liver, return to normal size due to hyperplastic reaction

Pathological hyperplasia
often caused by excessive hormonal disruption or growth factor stimulation
can increase risk of endometrial cancer
e.g. endometrial hyperplasia that results in abnormal menstrual bleeding and benign prostatic hyperplasia

Atrophy
shrinkage of size of cells
entire tissue or organ reducing in size
common in skeletal muscles, heart, sex organs, and the brain

causes
decreased work load
loss of nerve innervation
loss of blood supply
inadequate nutrition
decreased hormonal stimulation
aging
B12 deficiency

Metaplasia
one cell type is replaced by another cell type
a constant stressor can convert one cell type to another cell type that can deal with the stress better
respiratory epithelium of a cigarette smoker will convert from ciliated columnar epithelium to stratified squamous epithelium to survive the damage of the cigarette smoke better
ciliated columnar specialised for respiratory tract, captures any foreign particle inhaled and helps propel mucous out of lung
smoker’s cough without this, preneoplastic/precancerous chnage to bronchioepithelium, can result in full neoplastic changes


Dysplasia
disorderly proliferation of cells
proliferation: the process where cells increase in number through growth and division
loss of uniformity of cells and their architecture
presence of dysplasia increases risk of the tissue for developing an invasive cancer
example: traditional cervical screening tested for abnormal cells on the surface of the cervix
cervical cancer


Cellular Injury
hypoxia
ischemia
oxidative stress
pathological calcification
cells can only survive in narrow range of physiological parameters → Homeostasis
Injury:

General causes of cellular injury
physical: cold, heat, radiation, blunt force trauma
chemical agents: toxins, cigarette smoke, heavy metals, carbon monoxide
infectious agents: viruses, bacteria, parasites
genetic conditons: sickle cell anemia
nutritional deficiencies: lack of vitamins, minerals, glucose
immune conditions: autoimmune disease
hypoxic injury: lack of sufficient oxygen
Hypoxia
when oxygen saturation of tissue falls below 90%
significant hypoxia is below 88%
whole body
causes
inadequate oxygenation of blood
decreased oxygen carrying capacity of the blood
or
severe blood loss
consequences
cyanosis, mental confusion, rapid breathing and if untreated can result in coma, seizures, and brain death
seen in mountain climbers
can measure oxygen saturation from arterial blood samples by looking at arterial blood gases → through pulse oxyometer, clips onto finger
it measures change in light aborption in oxygenated and deoxygenated blood
can give reasonably accurate reading of accurate oxygenation
Ischemia
interruption of blood flow to cells and tissues
this can include anything that blocks blood supply
e.g. a blood clot, atheroscelosis, or a traumatic injury to a blood vessel (frostbite)
blockage of the blood vessel also blocks the movement of all fluids such as removal of waste
this can lead to necrosis (death of tissue) and build up of metabolic waste products
frostbite: extreme cold caused vasoconstriction of blood vessels in attempt to conserve body heat
ischemia can cause hypoxia, but hypoxia doesn’t lead to ischemia

Oxidative stress
an imbalance between free radicals and antioxidants in the body
free radicals: oxygen containing species with a single unpaired electron in an outer orbit
→ unstable
→ react readily with DNA, proteins, or lipids (organic molecules) and steal their electrons to become stabilised
→this destabilises the cell and a chain reaction is started with electrons being stolen from other molecules
called Oxidative stress - can cause pathological conditions in the body: some neurodegenerative diseases, gene mutations, cancers etc.
some factors can increase production of free radicals: pollution, smoking, alcohol consumption
donate free electron, can reduce activity of free radical

Pathological calcification
Dysrtrophic calcification:
occurs in areas of degenerated and dying tissue despite normal levels of calcium and normal calcium metabolism
commonly seen in advanced atherosclerotic arteries
reduces the flexibility of the arteries
also seen in damaged heart valves
Metastatic Calcification
calcification that occurs with hypercalcaemia
causes: conditions that cause bone resorption
→ hyperthyroidism, bone marrow tumours, vitamin D disorders etc.
→ affects gastric mucosa, kidneys (failure included in picture), lungs, systemic arteries, pulmonary veins

Cell Death
Causes:
Apoptosis
Different types of necrosis
Apoptosis
programmed for organised cell death
essential for human development
provides a protective mechanism against disease
apoptosis can also occur after exposure to radiation and cytotoxic drugs

STAGES OF APOPTOSIS
cell membrane remains intact
enzymes break down cell contents
cell condenses and undergoes fragmentation
cell forms smaller apoptotic bodies that are consumed by phagocytes

Necrosis
is the major pathway of cell death due to irreversible injury
can be caused by physical injuries: burns, lacerations, hypothermia, oxygen deprivation
ischemia can cause this
pathological processes and results in a premature death of tissue due to autolysis
in autolysis: the cell membrane is broken down and cellular contents released, including cellular enzymes

Coagulative and liquefactive necrosis
coagulative necrosis
architecture of the tissue is preserved
tissue has a firm texture
infiltration of leukocytes
common in heart and kidney
myocardial and renal infarction
kidney: dead cells → viscous liquid, yellow

liquefactive necrosis
dead cells are digested and transformed to a viscous liquid
tissue architecture lost
necrotic material is commonly yellow discoloured due to the presence of neutrophils

Caseous necrosis
commonly seen in tuberculosis
dead tissue appears yellow/white and cheeselike
dead cells and debris are enclosed in a distinctive inflammatory border
in the case of TB, this is known as a granuloma

Gangrenous necrosis
fingers completely black
result of dead tissue from no blood getting to area
tissue not salvagable
dry gangrene: type that does not have a bacterial infection
wet gangrene: includes bacterial infection and tisk of sepsis is high