Pathology: General
eBook - ePub

Pathology: General

Aiman Zaher

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  1. 44 páginas
  2. English
  3. ePUB (apto para móviles)
  4. Disponible en iOS y Android
eBook - ePub

Pathology: General

Aiman Zaher

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Quick reference to Pathology, the basic cellular response to injuries, with succinct definitions ensuring this guide covers in 6 pages what you would usually find in 30 pages or more. This can be combined with the companion guides Pathology Systemic 1 and 2, putting these concise 6 page guides together for a solid 90 pages of information in 18 pages.

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Información

Año
2009
ISBN
9781423237860
Categoría
Medizin
Categoría
Pathologie
Environmental & Nutritional Disorders
Mechanical Injury
  • Varied causes (e.g., sharp objects, bullets)
  • Produces tissue damage
  • Possible death due to renal failure, septic shock, ruptured abdominal aortic aneurysm, and pulmonary embolism
  • Skin and soft tissue injuries
    • Incision: A clean cut by a sharp object
    • Abrasion or scrape: Superficial tearing of the skin
    • Laceration: A jagged tear, which usually extends to the underlying tissue
    • Puncture: A deep, tubular wound
    • Contusion: A bruise caused by injury to the blood vessels of the skin, organs, or both
  • Blunt force injuries
    • Head injury: Brain damage due to direct external injury or intracranial hemorrhage; brain contusion at the point of impact (coup injury) or on the opposite side of the brain (contrecoup injury)
    • Abdominal injury: Rupture of abdominal organs (e.g., spleen, liver) and contusion
    • Thoracic injury: Rib fracture, pneumothorax, and lung injury
    • Clots formed from hemorrhage by blunt force injuries may lead to embolism and/or infarction
Thermal Injury
  • Thermal injury from heat
    • Classification
      • First-degree burns (partial-thickness burns)
        • Hyperemia without significant epidermal damage
        • Generally heal without intervention
      • Second-degree burns (partial-thickness burns)
        • Blistering and destruction of the epidermis
        • Slight damage to underlying dermis
        • Generally heal without intervention
      • Third-degree burns (full-thickness burns)
        • Damage to the epidermis, dermis, and dermal appendages
        • Skin and underlying tissue often charred and blackened
        • Often require skin grafting
    • Superficial burns
      • First- and second-degree burns
      • Epithelium can regenerate
    • Deep burns
      • Third-degree burns
      • All of the epithelium destroyed; dermis and appendages damaged
      • Heal by scarring
    • Complications
      • Inhalation of smoke or toxic fumes
      • Severe dehydration
      • Curling ulcer: Acute gastric ulcer associated with severe burns
      • Infection: Common cause of death in burn victims; most frequent organism is Pseudomonas aeruginosa
  • Thermal injury from cold and freezing
    • Pathogenesis: Vasoconstriction leads to endothelial damage with thrombosis and ischemia
    • Frostnip: Prolonged immersion in cold leads to endothelial damage with edema and swelling due to leakage of fluid
    • Frostbite
      • May be localized and usually affects exposed areas (fingers, toes, earlobes, nose)
      • Effects of severe, prolonged frostbite
        • Erythema and pruritus
        • Intracellular ice crystals
        • Intravascular thrombosis
        • Possible local gangrene
      • May be generalized; leads to death
Electric Injury
  • Electric current passes through an individual and electric circuit completed
  • Mortality caused by current passing through the brain or heart
  • Morbidity
    • Respiratory diseases
    • Cardiac arrest and arrhythmias
    • Small cutaneous burns with blister (vesicle, bulla) formation at point of entry or exit of the electric current
    • Burns may be severe
Radiation Injury
  • UV radiation injury
    • Mostly sun damage to skin and eyes
    • Mechanism: Absorption of UV light by DNA causes DNA fractures or changes in sequences
    • Damage increases with increased UV exposure
    • Increased melanin is protective (diminishes the amount of UV absorption)
    • Acute injury of skin
      • Sunburn (first-degree burn)
      • Delayed vascular dilation causes erythema
      • Often superficial desquamation
      • Severe cases have blister formation
    • Chronic injury of skin
      • Collagen and elastic tissue damage
      • Epithelial changes
        • Cosmetic damage: wrinkling
        • Precancerous lesions: actinic keratosis
        • Cancerous lesions: basal cell carcinoma, squamous cell carcinoma, melanoma
    • Genetic predisposition: The effect of UV radiation injury will be exaggerated by genetic disorders (e.g., xeroderma pigmentosum)
      • Defect in DNA repair mechanisms causes sensitivity to UV light
      • Results in many skin conditions: scales and crusts, atrophy, poikiloderma, freckles (ephilides), actinic keratosis, early skin cancers
      • Treatment: protect from or avoid UV light
  • Ionizing radiation injury
    • Mechanism
      • Exposure to short-wavelength, high-frequency radiation
        • High- and low-dose therapeutic, occupational, and diagnostic X-rays and γ-rays
        • Particulate radiation: electrons, protons, and neutrons
        • Radioactive waste, nuclear disasters, atomic bomb radiation
        • Transfer of energy to molecules through ionization
        • Molecules are reactive and capable of damaging cells
        • Toxic free radicals affect vital cell components (DNA, intracellular membranes, cell membranes, other cellular organelles)
      • Damage to the DNA
        • Direct action (hit) on vital molecule
        • Indirect action: ionization of water can produce free radicals, which leads to damage to vital molecules
        • Damage repairable but very slow
      • Damage dependent on the total dose, rate of delivery, and type of tissue irradiated
    • Repair: DNA has the ability to repair itself
    • Radiosensitivity of specialized cells
      • Most susceptible: tissues with a high mitotic rate, rapid turnover, or both
      • Earliest blood cells to be affected: lymphocytes
      • Most sensitive (regularly and actively divide): lymphoid, hematopoietic, germ, GI mucosal, and rapidly dividing tumor cells
      • Intermediately sensitive: fibroblasts and cells of the endothelium, elastic tissue, salivary glands, and eye
      • Resistant (division ceases after fetal development): cells of bone, cartilage, muscle, CNS, kidney, liver, and most endocrine glands
    • Role of distribution and dosage in the effect of ionizing radiation
      • 50 Gy (5000 rad) to any one body region
        • No severe or lethal consequences
        • May be minor changes; therapeutic irradiation to the jaw may cause obliterative endarteritis to the salivary glands and bone
      • 3 Gy (300 rad) to the whole body leads to up to 50% chance of death
      • 10 Gy (1000 rad) to the whole body leads to 100% chance of death
    • Localized ionizing radiation i...

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