Tissues of the Body Flashcards

1
Q

Define Histology

A

The study of the structure of tissues by means of special staining techniques combined with light and electron microscopy.

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2
Q

Define the term “Tissue”

A

A collection of cells specialised to perform a particular function.

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3
Q

Define “organ”

A

Aggregations of tissues, specialised to perform a particular function.

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4
Q

State the relationship between mill-, micro- and nanometers

A

Millimeters: 1 X 10^-3m
Micrometers: 1 X 10^-6m
Nanometers: 1 X 10^-9m
Angstrom unit: 1 X 106-10m

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5
Q

Explain the value of histology in diagnosis

A

For many diseases doctors will not give a treatment until the histopathologists have given a diagnoses e.g. Cancers, ulcerative colitis and Crohn’s disease.
It is the GOLD standard of diagnosis: final proof is biopsy and histology.
It can inform therapy e.g. Lung cancer: small cell carinoma or non-small cell - two different treatments, treating one like the other makes it worse.

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6
Q

What is the size of most human cells?

A

10-20 micrometers

Oocytes are extremely large (0.1mm) and can sometimes see by eye!

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7
Q

What is the size of red blood cells?

A

7.2 micrometers

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8
Q

“The removal of a small piece of tissue from an organ of part of the body for microscopic examination (including blood).”

A

Biopsy

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9
Q

What type of biopsy would you use for the cervix or buccal cavity (especially used for squamous epithelium).

A

Smear

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10
Q

What type of biopsy would you use for the endometrial lining of uterus?

A

Curettage - like a sharp edged spoon

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11
Q

What type of biopsy would you use for e.g. The brain, breast, liver, kidney, muscle?

A

Needle - a large bore needle which the tissue goes up

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12
Q

Where would you use the biopsy technique ‘Direct incision’?

A

Skin, mouth, larynx

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13
Q

How would you biopsy the lung, intestines and bladder?

A

Endoscopic - flexible tube manoevered down the oeseophagus, trachea or up the urethra or rectum

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14
Q

How would you biopsy the heart or liver?

A

Transvascular - go in through a major blood vessel and usin X-ray watch where the probe is going and using scissors on the probe take off tissue

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15
Q

Why do tissues need to be fixed?

A
  1. Stops autolysing by lysosomes
  2. Kills microbes present that would cause putrefaction
  3. Macromolecules cross-link preserving cellular structure
  4. Stops the tissue being wet and bloody, therefore easier to handle, slice etc…
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16
Q

What types of fixatives are commonly used?

A

Glutaraldehyde, formaldehyde

17
Q

Describe how tissue processing can lead to shrinkage artifacts

A

When tissue is fixed the tissue shrinks, uneven shrinkage can create spaces which are unnatural and can be misinterpreted

18
Q

What is the value of histological staining?

A

Unstained cells are transparent and so have little contrast between different parts of the cell and the surrounding medium. However you can’t stain cells if you don’t want to kill them or compromise their natural function.

19
Q

What tissue components does the Periodic Schiff reaction stain?

A

It stains carbohydrates and glycoproteins magenta

E.g. Mucus-secreting cells (Mucins are glycoproteins) and basement membranes

20
Q

What tissue components are stained by Haematoxylin?

A

Stains acidic components of cells - purple/blue

E.g. Nucleolus (RNA), chromatin (DNA).

21
Q

What tissue components are stained by Eosin?

A

Stains basic components of cells - pink

E.g. Most cytoplasmic proteins and extracellular fibres

22
Q

What is phase contrast microscopy and what are its advantages?

A

Phase contrast microscopy exploits the interference effects produced when two sets of waves combine - as light travels through cells - and use these to produce heightened contrast (heightened light and dark effects).
The advantages of this is that it can be used on living cells (no stain needed).

23
Q

What is dark field microscopy and what are its advantages?

A

Darkfield microscopy uses light shone sideways through the cell - the reflection and diffractions of which highligh structures around the cell nucleus. This is used for a lot of pathological work, including the routine identification of syphilis and malaria.

24
Q

What is fluorescence microscopy and what are its advantages?

A

Fluorescence mircroscopy uses labelled antibodies to bind to specific components of the cell. These antibodies are labelled with a “stain” that are excited by UV light to fluoresce in different colours. Filters stop the high intensity UV light reaching the image plane, so only the fluorescing light reaches. The advantages are that specific cell components can be visualised.

25
Q

What is confocal light microscopy and what are its advantages?

A

Confocal light microscopy can eliminate “out of focus” glare from a thick fluorescently labelled specimen by scanning beams of light (usually from a laser) across the specimen - producing scanned images called optical sections. This effectively sections the tissue in a non-invasive way by light rather than physical means. The advantages of this is that it can image live specimens, enabling the construction of electronically automated 3D images from a series of 2D images taken at successive depths.