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P1253296801MpcEo

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Title: P1253296801MpcEo


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What is pathology?
  • Study of disease/suffering
  • Pathophysiology what goes wrong and why?
  • Diagnostic medicine, based on examination and
    interpretation of changes in tissues, organs (and
    now molecules)

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What causes disease?
  • Injury due to environmental forces
  • Defect in gene-regulated biologic functions
  • Both

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Examples of environmental threats
  • Biological bacteria, viruses, fungi
  • Physical radiation, mechanical trauma
  • Chemical nicotine, mercury, medications

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Tissue reactions
  • Usual tissue reactions are an appropriate
    gene-regulated response to the usual
    environmental forces the appearance or pattern
    of these reactions is considered normal
  • Defensive tissue reactions are appropriate
    gene-regulated responses to threatening forces
    the pattern of these reactions is called
    inflammation.

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Are defensive tissue reactions disease?
  • What is the outcome?
  • The threat is resolved subclinically
  • The patient feels sick for a brief time and then
    fully recovers
  • The process persists the patient develops a
    chronic disease.
  • The process overwhelms the patient vital
    functions are compromised beyond a certain level
    the patient dies.

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What is the process of inflammation?
  • To start
  • Cells under threat release signal molecules to
    alert nearby cells
  • Recruited inflammatory cells release more signal
    molecules and organize coordinated response

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Defendokines
  • Inflammation-associated molecules are
    innumerable, chemically diverse, and interactive,
    making it almost impossible to isolate their
    individual functions in vivo. E.g. IL-1, IL-8,
    interferons, tumor necrosis factors, etc
  • Their role as a group is to activate and regulate
    defense cells, circulatory cells, epithelial
    cells, stromal cells, etc to eliminate threat and
    repair damage.

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Specific defendokine activities
  • Activate epithelial cells to increase barrier
    permeability and increase normal functions, i.e.
    secreting mucus, ciliary beating, myoepithelial
    contractions

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  • Activate microvasculature to bring about three
    classic signs of inflammation
  • -rubor
  • -calor
  • -tumor

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Microvascular changes
  • Precapillary cells dilate to increase local blood
    flow calor and rubor.
  • Postcapillary cells increase vessel permeability
    higher pressure/flow plus increased leakiness
    tumor (edema).
  • Fibrinogen, RBCs, platelets extravasate and form
    temporary scaffolding and plug holes clots.

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  • Defendokines activate local nerves to create
    fourth classic sign of inflammation
  • -dolor

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  • Defendokines activate local immune cells,
    histiocytes, to mount specific cellular responses
    aimed at eliminating specific kinds of threats,
    e.g. neutrophilic (suppurative) or lymphocytic
    responses.

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  • Circulating defendokines lead to non-localized
    clinical symptoms fever, chills, sweats, aches,
    malaise, weight loss, etc.
  • Ideally, the defendokines and the entire
    inflammatory response restore order, but with
    loss of regulatory controls, inflammatory
    mediators contribute to the pathological
    state/disease.

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Resolving Inflammation
  • Inflammatory resolution depends on eliminating
    threat and repairing damage
  • Repair process is simple or complicated depending
    on the extent of damage
  • Repair can result in restoration of original
    structure and function
  • Or, permanently altered structure with loss of
    functional capacity

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Repair process
  • Repair involves accelerated cellular renewal and
    new cellular-extracellular matrix interactions
  • Cell proliferation is stimulated by group of
    defendokines called growth factors
  • If cellular regeneration mechanisms are
    compromised, healing is impaired

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Repair process contd
  • Coordinated by histiocytes
  • Break down and clear debris
  • Stimulate epithelial cells to regenerate
  • Stimulate circulatory cells to form new network
    of capillaries
  • Stimulate stromal cells to lay down new collagen
    framework

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Fibrosis
  • If cell renewal mechanisms and extracellular
    framework are intact, results are close to
    original state
  • If cells cant regenerate sufficiently or fibrous
    framework has been destroyed, fibrosis results
  • Damaged elements broken down, and new,
    re-inforced fibrous structure is laid down

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Scar
  • When normal tissue is replaced by fibrous
    elements (mostly collagen), the result is a
    fibrous scar, which is often stronger that
    original tissue, but less functional.

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Persistence of Inflammation
  • If defensive response cannot eliminate threat,
    then there is on-going inflammatory activity and
    on-going repair efforts, with fibrosis.
  • Sometimes, destruction and maintenance can be
    balanced and function maintained.
  • Often, the destruction outpaces the protective
    measures and worsening fibrosis and loss of
    function ensue

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Classification of disease states
  • Clinical and pathological classification of acute
    and chronic inflammatory diseases is extremely
    inconsistent.
  • Multiple etiologies can result in the same
    clinical or histological appearance.
  • The same process taking place in different
    locations receives different names.
  • Historical names arent updated with new
    understanding.

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Treatment contributes additional complications
  • Ideally, medications act as supplemental defenses
    or help regulate inflammatory response.
  • Commonly, medications also act as additional
    adverse forces, either by direct damage to
    cells/tissues, by interfering with normal
    functions, or by interfering with
    defensive/compensatory functions.

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Neoplasia, a disorder of cell proliferation
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Normal cell proliferation
  • Gene-regulated process that provides proper
    number of terminally differentiated, functionally
    specific cells types, then shuts down
  • Necessary component of tissue maintenance and
    repair
  • Cell populations vary in normal rate of cell
    proliferation

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Abnormal cell proliferation
  • Can occur in any cell line
  • Gene-altered, monoclonal process that is not
    under the normal regulatory controls
  • Tends to produce too many cells does not have
    normal limits or shut-down mode

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Neoplasia new growth
  • Each neoplastic growth begins as a genetically
    altered stem cell
  • Its gene alterations (mutations) are responsible
    for the disordered proliferative activity that
    produces too many cells.
  • This abnormal population of mutated cells often
    have some similarities to original cell line, but
    can become unrecognizable

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Mutational transformation
  • Mutational transformation of stem cell into
    potentially neoplastic cell is complex
  • Environmental forces and/or inherited gene
    mutations play a role
  • Again, environmental forces include physical,
    chemical and microbiological agents

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Mutations affect cell proliferation activities
  • Hyperactivate proliferation genes
  • Inactivate proliferation inhibition genes
  • Inactivate programmed cell death genes

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Will a transformed cell become a clinically
evident neoplasm?
  • Original transformed cell might remain dormant
  • Original cell or its early progeny might be
    eliminated by bodys defense system
  • Might multiply and grow to be clinically evident

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Tumors, masses and polyps
  • Patients and clinicians frequently confronted
    with newly discovered lump
  • Is it neoplastic?
  • If so, what kind of neoplasia, i.e. where is it,
    what does it look like and how bad is its
    behavior likely to be?

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Reactive vs Neoplastic growth
  • In response to irritation/inflammation, cells
    regenerate and form hyperplastic growths with
    lots of mitotic figures and enlarged cells, but
    process is regulated
  • Neoplastic cells also dividing actively, cells
    enlarged (and nucleus-cytoplasm ratio increased),
    but mutational changes lead to unregulated
    process
  • Can be clinically and histologically difficult to
    differentiate

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Diagnostic terminology for neoplasms
  • Grossly evident organ location, e.g. lung
  • Histologically evident tissue or cell population
    of origin, e.g. respiratory epithelium
  • Histologically or immunocytochemically apparent
    cell type differentiation, e.g. pulmonary
    surfactant secretory type
  • Gross or histologic growth pattern

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Terms for types of neoplasms
  • Sarcoma
  • Lymphoma, leukemia
  • Melanoma
  • Carcinoma
  • Adenoma vs. adenocarcinoma

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Benign vs. Malignant
  • A spectrum of behavior, rather than black or
    white dichotomy

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Benign features
  • -Respond to local tissue constraints
    well-circumscribed, symmetric growth pattern
  • -Cells are larger than normal cells but have
    orderly architecture, related normally with each
    other and the surrounding stroma
  • -Slow growth (percentage dividing cells is low)
  • -diploid genome

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Malignant features
  • Not restrained by tissue boundaries asymetric,
    poorly-circumscribed borders
  • Cells often much larger than normal
  • Cells differ wildly from each other
    pleomorphic
  • Often aneuploid
  • May not resemble normal cells structurally or
    functionally

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  • Malignancy is established by invasive and
    metastatic behavior
  • But there are entities that metastasize but are
    not lethal, and non-metastatisizing, deadly
    neoplasms
  • Some neoplasms are considered malignant, but
    often dont kill the patient

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Diagnostic assessment
  • Stage size and spread of tumor
  • -non-invasive, locally invasive, regionally
    invasive, metastatic
  • Grade Cytologic appearance and histologic growth
    pattern
  • -how different from normal cells in size, shape,
    architectural arrangement, growth rate
  • Different staging and grading schemes for each
    body part/type of neoplasm.

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Invasion
  • Growth beyond tissue compartment delineated by
    basement membrane
  • Can be microscopic
  • Can invade neighboring structures/organs

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Metastasis
  • Spread to new location, either in same tissue
    (satellite lesions), local lymph nodes, or
    distant tissue (e.g. lung, liver, bone) via blood
    or lymphatic vessels.

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Malignant potential
  • Some lesions are self-limited and will never
    invade and metastasize
  • Some lesions are easily removed and cured, but if
    left alone might eventually progress
  • Some invasive lesions can be removed, but it is
    unclear whether they have already metastasized
    subclinically

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Non-invasive neoplasms (in-situ)
  • Generally considered benign
  • Concern over potential progression sometimes
    leads to aggressive labeling and treatment

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Prognosis and treatment
  • Appearance/behavior of neoplasm at time of
    discovery (i.e. stage and grade)
  • Historical statistics gathered on similar
    neoplasms (same type, stage, and grade)

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Neoplastic progression
  • Many neoplasms seems to undergo continued
    karyotypic instability and become increasingly
    genetically abnormal, with corresponding
    worsening behavior
  • Radiation and chemotherapy often accelerate this
    process

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