100% satisfaction guarantee Immediately available after payment Both online and in PDF No strings attached 4.2 TrustPilot
logo-home
Exam (elaborations)

NUR6003 Advanced Pathophysiology Notes

Rating
-
Sold
-
Pages
28
Grade
A
Uploaded on
02-02-2021
Written in
2020/2021

NUR6003: Advanced Pathophysiology DNP: Graduate Nursing: 2017 Summer Semester Dr. Morgan Jessica L. Clement, RN BSN Unit 1 PowerPoint Presentations/Lessons Lesson 1.1: Cellular Health & Injury Chapter 1 Cellular Health & Injury • The Cell o Basic unit of health o Diseases affect cells first, then the whole body • Homeostasis o Narrow range of an intracellular environment based on physiological parameters • Cellular Stress o Adaptation o Reversible Injury o Irreversible Injury o Cell Death o • Cell Death o Normal o Pathological • Injured Cells o May be morphologically identical but function differently o For example, injured myocardium does not contract • Cellular Adaptations o Reversible changes  Size, Number, Phenotype, Metabolic Activity, Function o Physiological  For example, uterus during menstrual cycle o Pathologic • Cellular Adaptations o Due to Physiologic Stress or Pathologic Stimuli  Hypertrophy  Hyperplasia  Atrophy  Metaplasia • Additional Responses to Stress o Intracellular Accumulation o Calcification o Cell Aging • Hypertrophy o Increased cell size à Increased organ size o No increase in number of cells o Occurs where limited capacity for replication o For example, muscle cells • Examples o Physiologic  Uterus in pregnancy o Pathologic  Heart in hypertension • Limit to Hypertrophy o If cells can’t compensate à degenerative changes occurs. • Hyperplasia o Increased number of cells o Occurs in tissue capable of proliferation o May occur in isolation or in conjunction with hypertrophy • Physiologic Hyperplasia o Hormonal  Glandular breast tissue in pregnancy o Compensatory  Increased hepatocyte proliferation after resection • Pathologic Hyperplasia o Caused by excessive hormonal or growth factors o Important in the healing process o If hormones/factors are removed Hyperplasia stops o Risk factor for cancer • Atrophy o Decreased cell size à Decreased organ size o May be functionally dormant or reduced o Common causes  Disuse  Denervation  Diminished blood supply  Inadequate nutrition  Aging • Mechanisms of Atrophy o Decreased protein synthesis o Protein degradation  Ubiquitin  Proteasome o Autophagy • Metaplasia o Replacement of one adult cell type with another o Cell susceptible to particular stress replaced with one less susceptible o Thought to be changes in stem cells o Not phenotypic change of mature cell o May lead to cancer • Classic Metaplasia Examples o Barrett’s Esophagus  Stratified Esophagus à gastric columnar o Bronchial ciliated columnar cell à stratified squamous cell  More likely to survive smoke  Loss of cilia function and mucus • Cell Injury & Death o Reversible o Irreversible  Necrosis  Apoptosis • Necrosis o Severe damage to membranes o Lysosome membranes break open and digest cell from inside o Cellular enzymes leak through membrane into extracellular space  Inflammatory reaction  Clinical enzymology  Dead cells may become calcified  Always pathological • Apoptosis o May be physiologic or pathologic o Loss of growth factor o DNA or protein damage o Nuclear dissolution o Cell membrane stays intact o No inflammatory response • Injurious Stimuli o Oxygen Deprivation o Chemical agents (toxins) o Infectious agents o Immunologic Reaction o Genetic Factors o Nutritional Imbalances o Physical Agents (trauma, shock, radiation, etc.) o Aging • Cell & Tissue Damage o Reversible vs. Irreversible  Mitochondria dysfunction  Profound disruption of membrane function • Reversible Injury o Cellular Swelling  Failure of energy dependent ion pumps o Fatty Change  Appearance of lipid vacuoles • Special Cases o Smooth ER of hepatocytes o Increased P-450 enzyme activity o Increased metabolism of entire pathway o May cause interactions • Patterns of Necrosis o Coagulative o Liquefactive o Gangrenous o Caseous (cheeselike) o Fat o Fibrinoid (requires microscope) • Mechanism of Cell Injury o Cellular response depends on:  Type of injury  Duration  Severity o Consequences depend on:  Type of cell  Status (nutritional/hormonal)  Adaptability  Genetic makeup • Mechanisms of Cell Injury o Injury results from abnormalities  Ability of Mitochondria to produce ATP and ROS  Calcium Homeostasis  Plasma and Lysosome membranes  DNA  Misfolding of proteins • Review of ATP o Mitochondria produce ATP from ADP plus PO4  Aerobic • Glucose + O2 à CO2 + H2O  Anaerobic • Glucose + NO oxygen à Lactic Acid • Fun Quote of the Week o High-energy phosphate in the form of ATP is required for virtually all synthetic and degradative processes within the cell, including membrane transport, protein synthesis, lipogenesis, and the deacylation-reacylation reactions necessary for phospholipid turnover. It is estimated that in total, the cells of a healthy human burn 50 to 75 kg of ATP every day! • ATP Depletion o Usually caused by lack of O2 o Mitachondrial damage o Some toxins (e.g. cyanide) • ATP Depletion o Cell Membrane pumps stop working  Sodium influx  Water follows sodium à cellular swelling o Increase glycolysis  Deplete glycogen  Increased Lactic Acid o Decreased pH suppresses enzyme activity • ATP Depletion o Calcium pumps stop working  Influx of Calcium o Protein synthesis stops  In prolonged ATP depletion  Ribosomes detach from RER  Polysomes à Monosomes • Mitochondrial Damage o ATP Depletion o Increased numbers of ROS o Membrane Permeability Increases o Proteins released à Apoptosis • Influx of Calcium o Crytsolic Calcium – usually 10,000 times lower than surrounding fluid o Most Intracellular Calcium is sequestered ER or Mitochondria. o When cell is damaged,  ATP calcium pump stops  Influx across damaged membranes  Activate cellular enzymes  Can induce Apoptosis • Oxidative Stress o Increase in Oxygen-derived Free Radicals (ROS)

Show more Read less
Institution
Course










Whoops! We can’t load your doc right now. Try again or contact support.

Written for

Institution
Course

Document information

Uploaded on
February 2, 2021
Number of pages
28
Written in
2020/2021
Type
Exam (elaborations)
Contains
Questions & answers

Subjects

Get to know the seller

Seller avatar
Reputation scores are based on the amount of documents a seller has sold for a fee and the reviews they have received for those documents. There are three levels: Bronze, Silver and Gold. The better the reputation, the more your can rely on the quality of the sellers work.
vicbanks Chamberlain College Of Nursing
Follow You need to be logged in order to follow users or courses
Sold
1438
Member since
5 year
Number of followers
1135
Documents
1566
Last sold
3 weeks ago
Essential study Materials

Get Assignments, Quizzes,Homeworks, Study Guides, Case studies, Thesis, Picot Questions and weekly Discussion Questions that\'ll help in your classes.

4.2

416 reviews

5
248
4
86
3
31
2
14
1
37

Recently viewed by you

Why students choose Stuvia

Created by fellow students, verified by reviews

Quality you can trust: written by students who passed their tests and reviewed by others who've used these notes.

Didn't get what you expected? Choose another document

No worries! You can instantly pick a different document that better fits what you're looking for.

Pay as you like, start learning right away

No subscription, no commitments. Pay the way you're used to via credit card and download your PDF document instantly.

Student with book image

“Bought, downloaded, and aced it. It really can be that simple.”

Alisha Student

Frequently asked questions