NUR6003 Advanced Pathophysiology Notes
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)
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nur6003 advanced pathophysiology dnp graduate nursing 2017 summer semester dr morgan jessica l clement
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rn bsn unit 1 powerpoint presentationslessons lesson 11 cellular health amp injury c