Cellular Adaptations
Cellular Adaptations
Cellular Adaptations
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Pathology
• Etiology
• Pathogenesis
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Overview
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Cell stress
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Cell stress
o Hypoxia
o Infection
o Immune injury
o Trauma
o Poor nutrition
o Radiation
o Chemicals
o Carcinogens
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Stages in cellular response to stress
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Response to stress
• Type of injury
• Duration
• Severity
• Adaptability of the cell
• Physiolgoical condition or pathological condition
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Adaptation Mechanisms
• Hypoplasia • Metaplasia
• Atrophy
• Hypertrophy
• Hyperplasia
• Involution
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Adaptation Mechanisms
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Adaptation Mechanisms
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Hypoplasia
-plasia – formation, development
• Causes
– Mutations
– Lack of hormones
– Infections e.g. rubella
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Atrophy
• Decrease in cell size or
• Decrease in number of cells
→ smaller tissue or organ
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Atrophy
This adaptive mechanism may be:
• a physiological response or
• a pathological response
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Atrophy - Physiological
Atrophy occurs in
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Atrophy - Physiological
Atrophy occurs in
• Decrease in workload
– E.g. ageing
– E.g. immobility in disuse atrophy of leg muscles
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Atrophy - Physiological
Atrophy occurs in
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Atrophy - Pathological
Atrophy occurs in
• Loss of innervation
– In polio with nerve damage, there is muscle atrophy
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Atrophy
Atrophy occurs in
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Thyroid Uterus
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Atrophy - Pathological
Atrophy occurs in
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Hypertrophy
• ↑ in the cell size which leads to organ enlargement
• ↑ amounts of structural proteins and organelles
• occurs in cells with limited capacity to divide
Hypertrophy
Physiologic Pathologic
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Hypertrophy
• Hormonal stimulation
– Pregnancy - oestrogen stimulated
smooth muscle hypertrophy
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Hypertrophy
• Compensatory hypertrophy
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Hypertrophy
Pathological response
• Organs proximal to obstruction or resistance
– Cardiac hypertrophy due to hypertension, valvular
stenosis or insufficiency
– Hypertrophy of bladder
associated with prostatic
gland hyperplasia
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Hypertrophy
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Hypertrophy
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Hyperplasia
• Increase in the number of cells
• increase in the size of a tissue or organ
Hyperplasia
Physiologic Pathologic
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Hyperplasia
Physiological response
• Increased hormones
– Proliferative phase endometrium
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Hyperplasia
Compensatory
• To replace lost tissue
– Liver regrowth after partial resection
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Hyperplasia
Pathological hyperplasia
• Benign prostatic hyperplasia
• Cell damage e.g. chronic irritation
• Abnormal increase in hormones
– Adrenal gland hyperplasia in response to
secretion of ACTH by the pituitary gland
• Controlled abnormal increase in hormones
– Endometrial hyperplasia with imbalance of
hormones leading to abnormal menstrual
bleeding
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Hyperplasia
In most organs
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Involusion
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Metaplasia
• Potentially reversible
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Metaplasia
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Metaplasia - examples
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Metaplasia - examples
• Gastric epithelium to intestinal epithelium
• Oesophageal epithelium changes to glandular
epithelium (Barrett’s oesophagus)
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Metaplasia - examples
• Cervical glandular epithelium changes to squamous
epithelium
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Dysplasia
• Disorganized growth
• Disorderly but non neoplastic proliferation
• Abnormal cells and abnormal organization of cells
– Atypical cytological alterations of cell size, shape and
nuclear size and shape
– Atypical cytological organization
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Intracellular accumulations
• Cells may accumulate abnormal amounts of various
substances
• Located in the cytoplasm, within organelles or in the
nucleus
• May be synthesized by the affected cells or other
cells
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Intracellular storage
Excess storage
• Fatty change
• Cholesterol and cholesterol esters
• Protein
• Glycogen
• Pigments: lipofuschin, melanin, haemosiderin, bilirubin,
carbon, copper
Calcium deposits
• Physiological
• Pathological - dystrophic, metaplastic
• Ossification
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Intracellular storage
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Fatty change
• Triglycerides within liver
parenchymal cells in
– Obesity
– Diabetes
– Hepatitis
– Toxicity - drugs and alcohol
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Cholesterol and cholesterol esters
• Atherosclerosis
– In smooth muscle cells,
macrophages in arterial intima
• Hyperlipidaemis xanthomas
– In macrophages in subcutis and in
tendons
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Pigments - Melanin
• Dark brown pigment
• Excess production:
– Exposure to sunlight
– Pregnancy
– Addison’s disease
– Malignant melanoma
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Pigments - Haemosiderin
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Pigments - Haemosiderin
• Systemic iron overload
– Increased absorption of dietary iron
– Decreased utilisation of iron
• Haemochromatosis
• Haemolytic anaemia, transfusion
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Pigments - Carbon
• Carbon particles inhaled from polluted atmosphere
• Taken up by alveolar macrophages
• Deposits in draining lymph nodes
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Pigments - Bilirubin
• Normal major bile pigment from haemoglobin
• Excess systemic bilirubin
– Liver disease
– Obstruction of bile outflow
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Pigments - Bilirubin
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Calcium deposits
• Physiological calcification
– As seen in aging
– E.g. Costal cartilage and larynx
• Pathological calcification
– Abnormal deposition of calcium and small amounts of iron,
magnesium and other minerals
– Dystrophic calcification
– Metastatic calcification
– Calculi
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Calcium deposits - Dystrophic calcification
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Calcium deposits - Metastatic calcification
• Widespread deposition in vital normal tissues
• Raised levels of tissue and circulating calcium
– Hypervitaminosis
– Hyperparathyroidism
– Milk-alkali syndrome
– Sarcoidosis
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Calcium deposits - Calculi
• Calcium salts in calculi
– Urinary tract (75% contain calcium)
– Salivary glands
– Biliary tract
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Calcium deposits
Ossification is uncommon bone formation
• Outwith skeletal system
• Secondary to calcification in
– Tumours
– Old haematomas
– Scars
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Question 1
a) Atrophy
b) Hyperplasia
c) Dysplasia
d) Neoplasia
e) Hypertrophy
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Question 2
A 51 year old male has a blood pressure of 150/95mm
Hg. If this condition remains untreated for years, which
of the following cellular alterations will be seen in the
heart?
a) Atrophy
b) Hypertrophy
c) Hyperplasia
d) Metaplasia
e) Haemosiderosis
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Question 3
The nonpregnant uterus of a 20 year old female
measured 7x4x3cm. She became pregnant, and just
before delivery of a term infant, the uterus measured
34x18x12cm. Which of the following cellular processes
was the major reason for the increase in the size?
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Question 4
After several weeks of immobilization of the leg in a
plaster cast, the diameter of the calf often decreases.
This change results from which of the following
alterations in the calf muscles?
a) Atrophy
b) Aplasia
c) Metaplasia
d) Calcification
e) Hypertrophy
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Question 5
After the birth of her first child, a 25 year old female
began breast-feeding. Which of the following
processes has occurred in the breast during
pregnancy that allowed her to nurse the infant?
a) Stromal hypertrophy
b) Lobular hyperplasia
c) Epithelial dysplasia
d) Intracellular accumulation of fat
e) Ductal epithelial metaplasia
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Question 6
Deposition of calcium in the renal tubular epithelium in
patients with primary hyperparathyroidism is the result
of which of the following processes?
a) Dystrophic calcification
b) Renal tubular atrophy
c) Autophagocytosis
d) Metastatic calcification
e) Cellular aging
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Question 7
A 32 year old male experiences heartburn with substernal pain
from reflux of gastric contents into the lower esophagus. After
many months, the esophageal epithelium exhibits the microscopic
appearance shown below. Which of the following pathological
alterations has occurred?
a) Squamous metaplasia
b) Mucosal hypertrophy
c) Columnar epithelial metaplasia
d) Atrophy of lamina propria
e) Goblet cell hyperplasia
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Question 8
The aortic valve seen in the figure was discovered at
the autopsy of a 72 year old male. The heart was
enlarged with marked left ventricular hypertrophy. The
serum chemistry was normal. Which of the following
pathologic processes account for the appearance of
the valve?
a) Amyloidosis
b) Dystrophic calcification
c) Metaplastic calcification
d) Haemosiderosis
e) Fatty change
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