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MID 2163 PATHOLOGY

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Page 1: 1 introduction

MID 2163PATHOLOGY

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DIVISIONS OF PATHOLOGY

GENERAL PATHOLOGY

SYSTEMICPATHOLOGY

CLINICALPATHOLOGY

ANATOMIC PATHOLOGY

SURGICALPATHOLOGY

PATHOPHYSIOLOGY

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General Pathology

Also called investigative pathology experimental pathology theoretical pathology

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General Pathology Foundation of pathologyStudy of the mechanisms of disease –

etiology & pathogenesis The common changes in all tissues

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1. INTRODUCTION TO PATHOLOGY2. CELL INJURY & ADAPTATIONS3. TISSUE INJURY4. HEALING5. HAEMODYNAMIC DISEASES6. NEOPLASIA7. INFECTIOUS & PARASITIC DISEASES

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INTRODUCTION TO

PATHOLOGY

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What is??

-PATHOLOGY-

“study of disease by scientific method”

pathos : suffering or disease~logos : study of

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Objective of Pathology

To identify and describe the different parts of a

disease process

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Disease???Abnormal variation in structure or function of

any part of body

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Pathology...

Explain the disease by studying the 4 aspects of the disease:

1. Etiology2. Pathogenesis3. Morphological changes4. Functional derangement &

clinical significance

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Etiologyaitia: cause

~logos: study

“study of causation or origin of disease”

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EtiologyWhy things occur?Factors that produce/predispose toward a

certain disease or disorderCause of disease

– primary etiology: known– idiopathic: unknown

Help in diagnosis, understanding and treatment of disease

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Etiology2 major etiological factors

– Genetic: age, genes– Acquired: infectious, environmental,

nutritional etcEtiology is followed by pathogenesis

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Pathogenesispathos: disease

genesis: creation

“mechanism / development of

disease”

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PathogenesisProcess of diseaseStarting from the initial stimulus to the

ultimate expression of disease− the origin & development of disease:

acute, chronic, recurrent

Gross & microscopic structure, function, chemistry and molecular mechanism

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PathogenesisTypes of pathogenesis include

− Microbial infection, inflammation, malignancy & tissue breakdown

Most disease caused by multiple pathogenetical process together

− Example: cancer – multiple pathogenesisPathogensis leads to morphological changes

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Morphological Changes

“structural alterations”

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Morphological ChangesStructural alterations in cells or tissue

that occur following the pathologenetic mechanisms

− the characteristic of disease or condition− changes maybe specific to a disease− thus, it help the pathologist to identify &

diagnose the disease

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Morphological ChangesThe changes can be seen with

● Naked eye – gross morphologic changes● Under microscope – microscopic changes

Morphological changes will lead to functional alteration and the clinical signs & symptoms of disease

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Functional Derangement &

Clinical Significance

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Functional Derangements

Disturbance of normal function of the organ due to the morphological changes

Determine the clinical features, course and prognosis of a disease

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Clinical SignificanceClinical manifestations

● Signs● Symptoms● Prognosis

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SignsObjective indication of some medical fact

or characteristic− the characteristic of disease or condition− changes maybe specific to a disease− thus, it help the pathologist to identify &

diagnose the disease

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SymptomsSubjective – e.g: stomachache, lower

back pain, fatigue = can be sensed by the patient

3 main types of symptoms− Chronic : long lasting/recurrent

− Relapsing : affected by symptoms again

− Remitting : symptoms improve & sometimes fade away completely

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SymptomsAsymptomatic – NO symptom

– Asymptomatic disease condition• Disease present but there ar no

symptom• e.g: Ca Breast

– Asymptomatic infection• Infected person may transmit the

diasease to others• Cause complication that unrelatede

to the infection• e.g: STD – AIDS, genital warts

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PrognosisMedical term to describe the likely

outcome of an illnessComplete prognosis include expected time,

function and description of disease course

– Help to determine to attempt certain treatments or withold

Certain test for prognostic indicatorEstimators to describe prognoses =

progression-free survival, survival rate & survival time

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Causes of Disease

Can be caused by environmental factors,

genetic factors or combination of the two

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Environmental FactorsPhysical agentsChemicalsNutritional dificiencies & excessesInfections and infestationsImmunological factorsPsycogenic factors

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Environmental FactorsPhysical agents

– Apply excess energy in any form to the body

– e.g: trauma, radiation, extreme temperature, electric power

Chemicals– Chemical agents = chemically induced

injury

– Effects = toxic to all cell (cyanide), act locally at site of application (strong acids), toxic to certain organ esp liver & kidney

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Environmental FactorsNutritional dificiencies & excesses

– Dificiencies • poor supply, interference of absorption,

inefficient transport within the body or defective utilization – major class of food or essential elements

– Excess - obese

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Environmental FactorsInfections and infestations

– Infected by viruses, bacteria, fungi, protozoa, metazoa

– Cell destruction directly when infection happen – virus & protozoa

– Destruction from toxins by the infecting agent – diphteria, tetanus

– General or localize effects

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Environmental FactorsImmunological factors

– Abnormal immune system• Hypersensitivity reaction : exaggerated

immune response to an antigen – bronchial asthma

• Immunodificiency : increase susceptibility to different diseases – AIDS

• Autoimmunity : abnormal (exaggerated) immune reaction against self antigens - SLE

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Environmental FactorsPsycogenic factors

– Mental stress imposed by condition of life

– Maybe contributory factors in some group of diseases

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Genetic FactorsHereditary factors that are inherited

genetically from parentsMutation in chromosomes

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Course of Disease

“the series of events in a disease incident in a patient”

The natural history of the disease

(if no intervention from other factors)

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EXPOSURE

BIOLOGICALONSET

CLINICALONSET

PERMANENTDAMAGE

DEATH

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Exposure – Exposure to various risk

– The causative agents

Latency period– Period between exposure and biological

onset of disease

Biological onset– Marks the initiation of disease process

– NO sign or symptom

– May remain asymptomatic or subclinical (no clinical manifestations) or may lead to overt clinical diasease

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Incubation period– Variable period of time without any obvious

signs or symptoms from the time of exposure

Clinical onset of disease– Signs and symptoms become apparent

– Expression of disease may be variable in severity or in range of manifestations

Onset of permanent damageDeath

– Clinical death

– Biological death

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Clinical DeathOccurs when heart stop beating – cardiac

arrestReversible transmission between life and

biological deathDefinition: period of respiratory,

circulatory and brain arrest during which initiation of resuscitation can lead to recovery

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Clinical DeathSigns

– No pulse or blood pressure = completely unresponsive to the most painful stimulus

– Pupils widely dilated

– Recovery can occur with resuscitation

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Biological DeathSure sign of deathSets in after clinical deathIrreversible state of cellular destructionManifest with irreversible cessation of

– circulatory and respiratory functions– all functions of the entire brain

including brainstem