Session 05-Types of Cell Injury
Session 05-Types of Cell Injury
Session 05-Types of Cell Injury
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Fatty change
• Fatty change is principally encountered in cells
participating in fat metabolism or depend on fat
metabolism (e.g., hepatocytes, myocardial cells).
• It is manifested by the appearance of lipid vacuoles
in the cytoplasm.
• Injured cells may also show increased eosinophilic
staining in the cytoplasm.
• Fatty change also called steatosis.
Fatty change cont…
• Lipid vacuoles
(round and whitish)
• Increased eosinophilic
staining in the cytoplasm
(pinkish)
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Intracellular changes in reversible
cell injury
The intracellular changes (ultrastructure findings)
associated with reversible injury include:
1. Plasma membrane alterations such as blebbing,
blunting, or distortion of microvilli, and loosening
of intercellular attachments.
2. Mitochondrial swelling.
3. Appearance of phospholipid-rich amorphous
densities (amorphous black substances) in the
mitochondria.
Intracellular changes in reversible
cell injury cont…
4. Dilation of the endoplasmic reticulum with
detachment of ribosomes and dissociation of
polysomes.
5. Nuclear alterations, with clumping of chromatin.
6. The cytoplasm may contain phospholipid masses,
called myelin figures, which are derived from
damaged cellular membranes.
Intracellular changes in reversible
cell injury cont…
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Irreversible cell injury
• Two phenomena consistently characterize
irreversibility:
1. The inability to correct mitochondrial dysfunction.
o Causing lack of oxidative phosphorylation and ATP
generation.
2. Profound disturbances in membrane function.
o Injury to lysosomal membranes results in the enzymatic
dissolution of the injured cell.
o This is followed by necrosis type of cell death.
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Mechanisms of cell injury
• The biochemical mechanisms linking any given
injury with the resulting cellular and tissue
manifestations are:
– Complex.
– Interconnected.
– Tightly interwoven with many intracellular metabolic
pathways.
Cellular targets for injurious stimuli
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Ischemia-reperfusion injury
• This occurs when there is restoration of blood flow
to ischemic but viable tissues results,
paradoxically, in the death of cells that are not
otherwise irreversibly injured.
• Thus reperfusion after ischemic state paradoxically
deteriorates the already injured cell.
• This is a clinically important process that may
contribute significantly to tissue damage in
myocardial and cerebral ischemia.
Ischemia-reperfusion injury
• Mechanisms that may account for the exacerbation
of cell injury resulting from reperfusion into
ischemic tissues:
i. New damage may be initiated during
reoxygenation by increased generation of reactive
oxygen species.
ii. The inflammation that is induced by ischemic
injury may increase with reperfusion.
iii. Activation of the complement system may also
contribute to ischemia-reperfusion injury.
Key points
• Hypoxia is the commonest cause of the cell injury.
• Cell injury can reversible or irreversible.
• The main morphological changes seen in reversible
cell injury are cellular swelling and fatty change.
• Profound mitochondrial dysfunction and membrane
damage exacerbate irreversible cell injury.
• ATP depletion is the most common biochemical
mechanism of cell injury.
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Evaluation
1. What are the causes of cell injury?
2. What are the intercellular structural changes seen in
reversible cell injury?
3. Mention mechanisms involved in cell injury
4. Define ischemic-reperfusion injury.
5. List four (4) structural changes of reversible cell
injury.
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References
• Kumar V.; Abbas A. K.; Aster J. C.;(2013): Robbins
and Contran Pathologic Basis of Disease (9th Ed.)
Elsevier Saunders, China. Pg. 1, 6-9.
• Mohan H.;(2010): Text book of Pathology (6th Ed.)
Jaypee Brothers Medical Publishers, India . Pg. 21,
27-43.
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