Pathology Flashcards

1
Q

Central Chromatolysis

A

A reversible change that develops in the neuronal cell body after its axon has been transected; the RER disaggregates, the neuronal body balloons, and the nucleus is displaced toward the periphery of the cell

This is a reversible change that devel

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2
Q

Neurofilaments

A

Intermediate fibers - 10nm in width; components of the neuronal cytoskeleton

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3
Q

Neurotubules

A

Polymers of alpha and beta tubulin 20-26nm wide; components of the neuronal cytoskeleton

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4
Q

Which proteins cross-link cytoskeletal proteins?

A

Tau protein
Microtubule associated protein (MAPs)

Link neurotubules to one another and anchor them to other cellular structures

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5
Q

What do ischemic neurons look like on histology?

A

“Red dead” appearance - cells are shrunken, eosinophilic, and nuclei are pyknotic

Represents irreparable cell necrosis; visible on pathology 8-10 hours after cell death

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6
Q

Wallerian Degeneration

A

Occurs following transection of an axon; the portion distal to the transection degenerates along with its myelin

The cell body undergoes central chromatolysis, by which it activates protein synthesis in order to regenerate the axon; Schwann cells distal to the transection proliferate and make new myelin

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7
Q

How to astrocytes repair brain lesions?

A

Astrocytes respond to brain lesions by increasing the length and number of their intermediate filaments and processes to span destructive lesions; this repair process is less effective than collagenous repair elsewhere in the body and often leads to cyst formation

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8
Q

Glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP)

A

Composes the intermediate fibers of astrocytes

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9
Q

Rosenthal fibers

A

Inclusions of GFAP in astrocytic processes; seen in old brain scars and in some grade astrocytomas

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10
Q

Alexander disease

A

Caused by mutations of GFAP in the astrocytic neurofilament; characterized by diffuse deposition of Rosenthal fibers resulting in white matter degeneration and neurological dysfunction

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11
Q

Neuronophagia

A

The process by which microglial cells become activated to CNS damage via receptors that enable them to sense damaged tissue, and then encircle degenerating neurons to form clusters around small foci of necrotic brain tissue

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12
Q

Microglial nodules

A

Small clusters of activated microglial cells around loci of necrotic brain tissue

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13
Q

Sensory Ataxia

A

Axonal neuropathy involving the bipolar neurons of the DRG, causing degeneration of the central axon sof these neurons in the gracile and cuneate tracts of the spinal cord; associated with loss of position and vibration sense

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14
Q

What is the role of microglia in CNS inflammation and repair?

A

Activated microglial cells produce trophic factors that are important for neuronal recovery and can recruit blood monocytes into the brain; they also make cytokines and neurotoxins (NO, glutamate) that mediate neuroinflammation and can kill neurons

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15
Q

Endomysium

A

Extracellular space between individual muscle fibers; carries capillaries

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16
Q

Perimysium

A

Fibrocollagenous sheath surrounding each muscular fascicle

17
Q

Dystroglycan

A

Transmembrane protein within the sarcolemma; binds dystrophin (bound to cytoskeletal actin) as well as merosin (bound to basement membrane laminin)

18
Q

Type 1 Muscle Fibers

A

Slow, red
Myofibers are rich in oxidative enzymes, mitochondria, myoglobin, and lipid; capable of protracted, slow action and clonic activity

19
Q

Type 2 muscle fibers

A

Fast, white

Rich in glycogen and glycolytic enzymes; capable of fast, powerful, tonic contraction

20
Q

Types of muscle disease - myopathy vs. denervation atrophy

A

Myopathy - primary disease of muscle characterized by proximal weakness, elevated CK, and characteristic EMG changes; includes muscular dystrophies and inflammatory myopathies

Denervation atrophy - characterized by distal weakness and atrophy with normal CK

21
Q

Epineurium

A

Connective tissue that surrounds the entire nerve trunk and gives off vascular connective tissue septa which separate fascicles from one another

22
Q

Perineurium

A

A sheath of cells that tie that axons of each fascicle together

23
Q

Endoneurium

A

Small amount of matrix present between individual axons running within a fascicle

24
Q

Myelin - CNS vs. PNS

A

CNS - Myelin is produced by oligodendroglial cells, each of which makes up multiple segments of myelin that can wrap around many axons

PNS - Myelin is produced by Schwann cells, each of which makes up only one segment of myelin

25
Q

Traumatic Neuroma

A

A proliferation of collagen, Schwann cell processes, and axonal sprouts caused by a failure of Wallerian degeneration

26
Q

Distal axonopathy

A

Caused by an inability of the neuronal body to keep up with the metabolic demands of the axon; degeneration of the axon and myelin develop first in the most distal parts of the axon, causing characteristic “stocking glove” sensory loss and weakness

27
Q

Classes of neuropathies (3) + examples

A

Wallerian degeneration - trauma, infarction of a peripheral nerve (diabetic neuropathy, vasculitis), neoplasm

Distal axonopathy - drugs, industrial poisons

Segmental demyelination - chronic inflammatory demyelinative neuropathy, Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease

28
Q

Segmental demyelination

A

Characterized by breakdown of myelin over a few segments, causing loss of saltatory conduction and decreased conduction velocity; axon remains intact and there are no changes to the neuronal body

Reversible, because Schwann cells make new myelin

29
Q

Hypertrophic neuropathy

A

Caused by repetitive segmental demyelination and regeneration of myelin in peripheral nerves; “onion bulb formations” form as concentric layers of Schwann cell processes and collagen around an axon, causing gross thickening of peripheral nerves

Hypertrophic neuropathy with onion bulb formation is characteristic of Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease

30
Q

Roles of astrocytes in the CNS

A

Metabolism/inactivation of neurotransmitters (GABA, glutamate)

Monitor ionic environment of the neuron

Structural support cells

Scar formation

Functional hyperemia

31
Q

How does axon regeneration occur following Wallerian degeneration?

A

Cell body undergoes central chromatolysis, producing new proteins which flow down the axon

Bands of Bugner form and ensheath proliferating Schwann cells

Growth cone elongates along the Schwann cell lined tube

32
Q

Bands of Bugner

A

Basal lamina-lined endoneurial tubes that ensheath the proliferating Schwann cells following Wallerian degeneration of an axon; the new axonal growth tube elongates along this Schwann cell-lined tube

33
Q

What is the order in which neurological function returns following axonal regeneration?

A

First: Autonomic (sweating)
Second: Sensation
Third: Motor

34
Q

How does EMG work? How can it help differentiate between myopathy and denervation atrophy?

A

Insert a needle into muscle and measure the sum of all of the electrical activity of the motor units that depolarize with voluntary contraction; this is the motor unit action potential (MUAP)

In myopathy, the MUAP is small; in peripheral nerve disease, the MUAP is small at first but grows as intact peripheral nerves sprout and re-connect to muscle fibers; these peripheral nerves “convert” the muscle via type grouping resulting in a more segregated MUAP pattern