OM301 


 Pathology


Pathology is the study of the mechanisms and patterns of disease. It primarily involves observing and researching the abnormal changes in tissues, cells, and organs to elucidate the pathogenesis, pathophysiological processes, and pathological alterations of diseases. Pathology can be broadly classified into two categories: anatomical pathology and clinical pathology.

Anatomical pathology focuses on the study of pathological changes at the tissue and cellular levels, including morphological and structural alterations. Clinical pathology applies pathological knowledge to clinical practice, aiding in disease diagnosis and treatment planning. Pathology plays a crucial role in medical diagnosis, disease prevention, and treatment.


  • SYLLABUS

  • Introduction

  • Cells

  • Inflammation

  • Healing

  • Hemodynamic

Class

Date

Topic

May. 7

Introduction to Pathology

2

May 14

Cellular Reactions to Injury and Cell Death

3

May 21

Inflammation

4

May 28

Healing (Repair)

5

June 4

Hemodynamic Disorders

6

June 11

Thromboembolism, and Shock & Review

7

June 18

Midterm Exam

8

June 25

Diseases of the Immune System

9

July 2

Neoplasia

10

July 9

Heart diseases

11

July 16

Lung diseases

12

July 23

Kidney diseases

13

July 30

Liver diseases

14

Aug. 6

Gallbladder diseases & Review

15

Aug. 13

Final exam

  • Immune System

  • Neoplasia 

  • Heart

  • Lung

  • Kidney

  • Liver

  • GB


Immunity Disorder


•Hypersensitivity Reactions (Autoimmune)

•Immunodeficiency (Immunologic Tolerance)


Hypersensitivity Reactions

•The purpose of the immune response is to the purpose of the immune response is to protect against invasion by foreign organisms, protect against invasion by foreign organisms, but they often lead to host tissue damage. An exaggerated immune response that results in exaggerated immune response that results in tissue injury tissue injury is broadly referred to as a is broadly referred to as a hypersensitivity reaction.


Immunologic Tolerance

Immunologic tolerance is a state in which an individual is incapable of developing an individual is incapable of developing an immune response to specific antigens. Self immune response to specific antigens. Self- tolerance refers to lack of responsiveness to tolerance refers to lack of responsiveness to an individual’s antigens.an individual’s antigens.



Autoimmune Diseases

Definition: Autoimmunity implies that an immune response has been generated against
self-antigens (Autoantigens).


Central to the concept of autoimmune diseases is a breakdown of the ability of the
immune system to differentiate between self and non-self-antigens.

Absence of other well-defined cause of disease.


Systemic Lupus Erythematosus

SLE is a systemic autoimmune disease caused by autoantibodies produced against numerous self-antigens and the formation of immune complexes.

The major autoantibodies, and the ones responsible for the formation of circulating
immune complexes, are directed against nuclear antigens. Other autoantibodies react with
erythrocytes, platelets, and various complexes of phospholipids with proteins.

Disease is a chronic remitting and relapsing often febrile illness characterized principally by
injury to the skin, joints, kidney and serosal membranes. Each and every part of the body may
be affected.

It is common among women of childbearing age and a female to male ratio of 9:1, pick on set 2nd to 4th decade.

Etiology and pathogenesis

The cause of SLE remains unknown but it appears to be a complex disorder of multifactorial origin resulting from interactions including:
1. Genetic factors
Increased familial risk, 24% concordance in monozygotic twins
2. Hormonal factors
Estrogens 雌激素 confer increased risks (10 times more common in females than males) that accelerate during pregnancy and menses.
3. Environmental factors
Drugs such as hydralazine, pencillin etc induce SLE like illness)
Ultraviolet rays
Emotional stress
Surgery
4. Immunologic factors
i ) B cell hyperactivity
ii) Autoantibodies present with reactivity to DNA, RNA


Rheumatoid Arthritis

Rheumatoid arthritis (RA) is a systemic, chronic inflammatory disease affecting many tissues
but principally attacking the joints to produce a nonsuppurative 非化脓 proliferative 增生性 synovitis 滑膜炎 that frequently progresses to destroy articular cartilage and underlying bone with resulting disabling arthritis.


PATHOGENESIS

Rheumatoid arthritis (RA) is an autoimmune disease involving complex , and still poorly
understood, interactions of genetic risk factors, environment, and the immune system.


Clinical Features
Although RA is basically a symmetric polyarticular 多关节的 arthritis, there also may be constitutional symptoms such as weakness, malaise, and low-grade fever.

Many of the systemic manifestations result from the same mediators that cause joint inflammation. The arthritis first appears insidiously, with aching and stiffness of the joints, particularly in the morning. As the disease advances, the joints become enlarged, motion is limited, and in time complete ankylosis 僵硬 may appear.


Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome (AIDS)


AIDS is a retroviral 逆转录病毒 disease characterized by profound immuno suppression that leads to opportunistic infections, secondary neoplasms and neurological manifestations.

Mechanisms of immune deficiency:
Loss T cells: T cell death during viral replication;

decreased thymic 胸腺的 output, functional defects

Defective macrophage
Destruction of architecture 结构 of lymphoid tissues(late)


REJECTION OF TRANSPLANTS

The major barrier to transplantation of organs from one individual to another of the same
species is immunologic rejection of the transplanted tissue.

Rejection is a complex phenomenon involving both cell and antibody mediated reactions
that destroy the graft 移植 .

The key to successful transplantation has been the development of
therapies that prevent or minimize rejection.