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Cell damage: necrosis, apoptosis. General Death

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Cell damage: necrosis, apoptosis. General Death Ass.prof. Golovata Tatiana Stages 1 - Prene rosis or paranecrosis 2 - Necrobiosis 3 - Actually necrosis 4 - Autolysis ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Cell damage: necrosis, apoptosis. General Death


1
Cell damage necrosis, apoptosis. General Death
  • Ass.prof. Golovata Tatiana

2
  • Necrosis (from the Greek. Nekros - dead). Its
    death of cells and tissues in living organism.
    Necrosis may be in one cell, a group of cells,
    part of the body or organ.

3
Stages
  • 1 - Prene?rosis or paranecrosis
  • 2 - Necrobiosis
  • 3 - Actually necrosis
  • 4 - Autolysis

4
Prene?rosis or paranecrosis- changes similar to
necrotic, but reverse
5
Necrobiosis- profound degenerative changes, in
which the prevailing catabolic over anabolic
changes
6
Actually necrosis cell death when the time of
death can not be established
7
Autolysis- decomposition of dead substrate under
the influence of hydrolytic enzymes
8
Microscopic signs of necrosis. Changes in the
nucleus
  • 1.Kariopiknosis - wrinkling nucleus (?), caused
    by condensation of chromatin

9
Microscopic signs of necrosis. Changes in the
nucleus
  • 2.Karyorhexis breakdown of nucleus

10
Microscopic signs of necrosis. Changes in the
nucleus kariorhexis in lymph follicle
  • nuclei lymph follicle appear as small fragments

11
Microscopic signs of necrosis. Changes in the
nucleus
  • 3. Kariolysis - total splitting of the nucleus by
    hydrolytic enzymes

12
Microscopic signs of necrosis. Cytoplasm changes
  • 1.Plasma-coagulation protein denaturation and
    coagulation
  • 2. Plasmorhexis -cytoplasm decomposition
  • 3. Plasmolysis - hydrolytic fusion of cytoplasm
  • The process ends with a complete dissolution of
    cells

13
Microscopic signs of necrosis. Changes
intercellular substance
  • In the interstitial substance of the
    intercellular space depolymerization with
    glucosamineglycane and saturation with blood
    plasma proteins develops. As a result
    interstitial substance becomes swollen and fuses.
  • The collagen and elastic fibers are fused too.
  • Reticular fibers are preserved longer than the
    other structures. Then they dissociate to lumps.

14
Classification of necrosis
  • I. According to the cause
  • 1) traumatic (caused by chemical or physical
    factors)
  • 2) toxic (toxins of bacteria, chemicals)
  • 3) trophoneurotic (in disturbances of nervous
    trophic)- bed-sore
  • 4) allergic (develops in the sensitized organism
    as hypersensitivity reaction of immediate type)
  • 5) vascular (infarction).

15
Classification of necrosis
  • II. According to the clinic and morphological
    forms
  • 1) coagulative (dry) necrosis
  • 2) colliquative (liquefactive) necrosis
  • 3) gangrene (originate from Greek ltltgangrainagtgt
    fire) necrosis of tissue adjacent to the outer
    environment
  • a) dry
  • b) wet
  • 4) sequestration
  • 5) infarction.

16
Classification of necrosis
  • III. According to mechanism of its development it
    may be direct and indirect.
  • Direct necrosis arise immediate action of causal
    factor (toxic and traumatic)
  • Indirect (mediate) necrosis may be vascular and
    trophoneurotic.

17
Coagulative necrosis
  • This is the most common type of necrosis which is
    caused by ischemia, and less often by bacterial
    and chemical agents.
  • The organs commonly affected are the heart,
    kidneys and spleen.

18
Coagulative necrosis
  • In gross examination the foci of coagulative
    necrosis in the early stage are pale, firm and
    slightly swollen.
  • Microscopic change probably results from
    denaturation of structural and enzymatic proteins

19
Colliquative necrosis
  • Colliquative necrosis due to ischemic injury and
    bacterial infections. Because of hydration and
    colliquation of tissue by the action of powerful
    hydrolytic enzymes. The common examples are brain
    infarct and abscess cavity.

20
Colliquative necrosis
  • In gross examination the affected area is soft
    and swollen. Late a cyst wall is formed.
  • Microscopically, the cystic space contains
    necrotic cell detritus. Macrophages filled with
    phagocytosed material.

21
Infarction
  • Infarction is vascular necrosis.
  • The causes of infarction are prolonged vascular
    spasm, thrombosis or embolism .

22
Sequestration
  • Sequestration is an area of dead tissue which
    does not experience autolization and is freely
    located in the living tissue. It is
    characteristic for osteomyelitis - purulent
    inflammation of the bone marrow.

23
Gangrene
  • Wet gangrene. Occurs under the action of
    putrefactive microorganisms. Tissue to swell,
    become swollen, emit a fetid smell, demarcation
    zone is not defined.
  • Wet gangrene occur in the lungs, intestines and
    uterus.

24
Gangrene
  • Dry gangrene begins in the distal part of a limb
    due to ischemia. The typical example is the dry
    gangrene in the toes and feet of an old patient
    due to arteriosclerosis.

25
Bed-sore
  • Is a kind of gangrene, death of the tissue under
    the influence of pressure (sacral area, spinous
    processes, great trochanter). It is
    trophoneurotic necrosis in severily ill patients.

26
Outcome of necrosis
  • Favorable
  • organization, replacement by connective tissue
    with formation of a scar or a capsule
  • petrifaction
  • ossification, formation of bone
  • aseptic autolysis.
  • Unfavorable
  • saprogenic fusion of necrotic tissue followed by
    sepsis.

27
APOPTOSIS
  • Apoptosis - genetically programmed necrosis
    unwanted or defective cells in living organism
    and is aimed at the destruction of cells during
    embryogenesis and physiological involution death
    epithelium of the skin, red and white blood
    cells.
  • Biological meaning of apoptosis is the
    elimination of damaged cells.
  • Between 50 and 70 billion cells die each day due
    to apoptosis in the average human adult.

28
Morphogenesis of apoptosis
  • These changes include
  • - blebbing, cell shrinkage
  • - nuclear fragmentation
  • - chromatin condensation and chromosomal DNA
    fragmentation
  • - formation of apoptotic bodies
  • - phagocytosis of apoptotic bodies by macrophages
    or parenchymal cells.

29
  • In contrast to necrosis, which is a form of
    traumatic cell death that results from acute
    cellular injury, apoptosis, in general, confers
    advantages during an organism's life cycle.

30
Death
  • Depending on the cause distinguish natural
    (physiological) death from old age and wear on
    the body, violent death from injury or other
    negative effects on the body ending in death, and
    from diseases (inviolent)

31
Stages of dying
  • Agony
  • Clinical (somatic ) death
  • Biological (molecular) death

32
Agony
  • Terminal condition characterized
  • Violation of the central nervous system (sopor or
    coma)
  • Low blood pressure
  • Centralization circulatory
  • Breathing disorders
  • It was during the agony of the body loses 60 ...
    80 grams of weight (due to complete combustion
    and depletion of cellular ATP reserves), which in
    some scientific-sounding articles called weighing
    souls who left after the agony of the body.

33
Clinical death
  • Clinical death is characterized by respiratory
    and cardiac arrest during 5-6 minutes while live
    brain cells. Clinical death is reversible process
    of dying. Reversibility depends on the degree of
    hypoxic changes in the brain.

34
Biological death
  • Biological death is the permanent (irreversible)
    cessation of all biological functions that
    sustain a living organism.

35
Signs of biological death
  • Relative Relative signs of death
  • Byeloglazovs sign
  • (cat eye)
  • While squeezing
  • the eyeball
  • from a deceased
  • pupil becomes oval.

36
Reliable signs of death
  • early
  • postmortem lividity (PML)
  • changes in the muscles (Cadaveric Rigidity)
  • cooling of the body
  • desiccation of the skin
  • late
  • preserving of the body-
  • -saponification ?r
  • (Adipocere formation),
  • -mummification
  • Which destroy the body -
  • -putrefaction

37
Postmortem Lividity (PML)
  • After termination of cardiac activity and loss of
    tone of the vascular wall is a passive movement
    of blood through the vessels by gravity and
    concentration it in below the body parts.

38
Mummification
  • Mummification means a modification of process
    of putrefaction in which there is a dehydration
    or dessication of all body after death.

39
Questions to test
40
And yet life is beautiful
  • Thank you for your attention
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