Stack #34270 Word Scramble
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Question | Answer |
What is atrophy? | a decrease or shrinkage in cell size. |
Why do cells change? | escape injury and protect themselves. |
Shrinkage in tissue leads to | shrinkage in an organ |
Occurs during early developement. An example would be the thymus gland undegoes atrophy during child hood. | Physiologic atrophy |
Normal atrophy | Physiologic atrophy |
Occurs as a result in a decreased workload, pressure, use, blood supply, nutrition, hormonal stimulation, and nervous stimulation. | Pathologic atrophy |
abnormal atrophy | pathologic atrophy |
An increase in cell size | hypertrophy |
three common cell types that undergo atrophy | heart, kidneys, and skeletal muscles |
3 causes of hypertrophy | increase in cellular protein,increase in functional demand on the cell, triggers of hypertrophy mechanical and trophic signals |
Stretching and working out | mechanical signals of hypertrophy |
Trophic hypertrophy | growth factors, hormones, and vasoactive agents |
An increase in the number of cells resulting from an increased rate of cellular divison | hyperplasia |
where is hyperplasia commonly found? | in epithelial cells(skin, mouth), hepatocytes( liver cells),and kidney cells |
Cells MUST exhibit the capacity to divide | hyperplasia |
Hyperplasia and hypertrophy can occur | together and both take place if the cell can synthesize dna |
Compensatory hyperplasia | is normal and enables certain organs to regeneratate at cellular levels |
cells that can not regenerate include | skeletal muscle, nerve, myocardial,and some cells of the eye |
Compensatory hyperplasia commonly occurs in | the liver epidermal and intestinal epithelia, hepatocytes, liver cells, bone marrow, fibroblasts, bone and cartilage, and smooth muscle cell see page 68 in book |
increase in # of cells due to estrogen influence | hormonal hyperplasia |
who exhibits hormonal hyperplasia | women and men experince it during puberty |
Where does hormonal hyperplasia commonly occur? | in estrogen dependent organs |
dysplasia | abnormal changes in size shape and organization of mature cells |
where is dysplasia commonly found? | in epithelial tissue of the cervix and respiratory tract |
how can dysplasia be classified | mild, moderate, or severe |
What often causes dysplasia? | cancerous cell growth or irritating stimuli such as smoking |
Removal of the stimulus does what to dysplastic changes? | reverses the abnormal cell growth |
abnormal proliferation of normal cells in response to some type of stimulation | Pathologic hyperplasia |
Cancer is | abnormal growth on abnormal cells not pathologic hyperplasia because hyperplasia is on normal cells |
Reversible replacement of one mature cell by another | metaplasia |
What do columnar epithelial cells do that assists in maintaing a healthy airway? | it works as a filter to keep airways clean but smokers get squamous epithelial cells which do not filter the airway |
Why is it devestaing for the airway to have metaplasia in the airway? | dysplasia and cancerous transformation can occur |
What is thought to cause metaplasia? | thought to be caused by stem cells getting confused due to new stimuli (smoking) in the cell's enviroment |
Celluar injury occurs when? | if the cell is unable to maintain homeostasis |
when injured cells can recover | reversible injury |
when injured cells can not recover | irreversible injury |
what is the most common mechanism of cell injury? | hypoxic injury |
What is hypoxia? | lack of sufficent oxygen |
What are causes of hypoxia? | loss of hemoglobin, decreased production of RBC, disease of the cardiovascular system, and poisioning of oxidative enzymes |
lack of blood supply | ischemia |
what is the most common cause of hypoxia? | ischemia |
What causes ischemia? | gradual narrowing of the arteries ( aretriosclerosis) and complete blockage of blood clots ( thrombosis) |
What is anoxia? | a total lack of oxygen that is sudden |
Embolus(blood clot), drowning, stroke, and pulmonary embolus are examples of | anoxia |
which is more damaging anoxia or hypoxia? | anoxia bc its sudden |
Chemical injury begins when? | a biochemical interaction between a toxic substance and the cell's plasma membrane causing damage and increased permeability |
What causes cellular injury? | direct toxicity by combining wirh a molecular component of the cell membrane or organelles and reactive free radicals and lipid peroxidation |
free radicals like to bind with | Vitamin E |
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Snpatrck
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