Degenerações - Conceito e Classificação
Summary
TLDRThis video lesson, led by Professor Aline, delves into reversible cellular injuries and extracellular deposits. It explains how cells adapt to stress through mechanisms like hypertrophy, hyperplasia, and atrophy, and explores the biochemical and morphological changes that occur during cellular injury. The lesson covers the causes of cellular damage, including hypoxia, physical and chemical agents, and immune reactions, and highlights the role of ATP depletion and membrane damage. It also differentiates between intracellular accumulation and extracellular deposits, focusing on the implications for health and disease.
Takeaways
- 😀 Degeneration refers to a reversible cellular injury caused by biochemical changes resulting in the accumulation of substances within the cell.
- 😀 The term 'degeneration' and 'intracellular accumulation' are often used interchangeably to describe reversible cellular injuries, depending on the reference book.
- 😀 Cells maintain homeostasis, a stable state, by adapting to various stressors such as harmful stimuli, which can be endogenous or exogenous.
- 😀 Cellular adaptive responses include hypertrophy (cell size increase), hyperplasia (cell number increase), atrophy (cell size decrease), and metaplasia (change in cell phenotype). These adaptations are reversible.
- 😀 When adaptive responses fail due to intense or prolonged stimuli, cells progress to irreversible injury and potentially cell death.
- 😀 Reversible cellular injury occurs when a cell can return to its normal state once the harmful stimulus is removed, but irreversible injury leads to permanent damage or cell death.
- 😀 Common causes of cellular injury include oxygen deprivation (hypoxia), physical agents (trauma, temperature extremes), chemical agents (toxins, drugs), infectious agents (bacteria, viruses), and genetic defects.
- 😀 Mitochondria, plasma membranes, lysosomes, and protein synthesis machinery are key cellular components affected during cellular injury.
- 😀 Biochemical alterations due to injury can result in reduced ATP production, membrane failure (e.g., sodium-potassium pump dysfunction), and accumulation of abnormal proteins.
- 😀 Accumulation of substances can occur within cells (degeneration) or outside cells (extracellular deposition), leading to functional and morphological changes in cells.
- 😀 In cases like fatty liver, the abnormal metabolism of lipids leads to their accumulation in hepatocytes, while genetic disorders can cause the buildup of proteins due to enzyme deficiencies.
Q & A
What is the main topic discussed in the video lesson?
-The main topic of the video lesson is reversible cell injuries and extracellular deposits, which are further divided into six parts due to the complexity of the subject.
What are the primary sources referenced in the lesson?
-The primary sources are 'Odontologia Geral' by Brasileiro Filho and 'Bases Patológicas das Doenças' by Robbins and Cotran, 9th Edition.
How is degeneration defined in the context of cellular injury?
-Degeneration is defined as a reversible cellular injury that occurs due to biochemical alterations, resulting in the accumulation of substances inside the cells.
What is the difference between 'degeneration' and 'intracellular accumulation'?
-The terms 'degeneration' and 'intracellular accumulation' are used interchangeably to describe reversible cellular injuries, but 'degeneration' is favored by some texts, while 'intracellular accumulation' is preferred by others, such as Robbins.
What is the process that leads a cell from normal to a state of injury?
-Cells maintain homeostasis through physiological balance but may respond to harmful stimuli by undergoing adaptive changes like hypertrophy, hyperplasia, atrophy, or metaplasia. If these adaptations exceed their limits, the cell progresses to injury, which may be reversible or irreversible.
What determines whether a cell injury is reversible or irreversible?
-The reversibility of cell injury depends on the intensity, duration, and type of stimulus, as well as the cell's adaptability and vulnerability to the injury.
What happens when a cell undergoes reversible injury?
-In reversible injury, the cell can return to its original state once the harmful stimulus is removed, without any lasting damage.
What types of stimuli can cause cell injury?
-Cell injury can result from various stimuli, including hypoxia, ischemia, physical agents (like trauma and temperature extremes), chemical agents, infectious agents, immunological factors, genetic diseases, and nutritional imbalances.
What are some biochemical alterations that occur in cells during injury?
-Biochemical alterations include mitochondrial damage, damage to cell membranes, reduction in ATP production, failure of ion pumps, accumulation of lipids, proteins, and DNA damage. These changes disrupt normal cellular function.
What is the distinction between intracellular accumulation and extracellular deposits?
-Intracellular accumulation refers to the buildup of substances inside the cell, whereas extracellular deposits occur outside the cell, in the interstitial space. Both may involve similar substances but are categorized differently depending on their location.
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