B Pharmacy Sem 3: Pathophysiology I
Subject 5 : Pathophysiology I
1. Cell Injury, Adaptation & Death
2. Acute & Chronic Inflammation
3. Hemodynamic Disorders: Edema, Thrombosis & Shock
4. Disorders of Blood Cells: Anemias & Leukemias
5. Immune Mechanisms & Hypersensitivity Reactions
6. Introduction to Infectious Disease Pathology
Unit 1: Cell Injury, Adaptation & Death
This unit explores how cells respond to stress, the mechanisms by which they adapt or succumb, and the biochemical and morphological hallmarks of reversible and irreversible injury culminating in cell death.
1.1 Cellular Homeostasis & Stressors
Homeostasis: Dynamic equilibrium of the cellular environment, maintained by ATP‑dependent ion pumps, redox balance, and macromolecular turnover.
Stressors: Hypoxia, toxins, free radicals, infection, physical trauma, nutritional deficiencies.
1.2 Adaptive Responses
Adaptation Type | Definition | Mechanism & Examples |
---|---|---|
Hypertrophy | ↑ Cell size to meet increased functional demand | ↑ synthesis of cytoskeletal proteins (e.g., cardiac muscle in hypertension) |
Hyperplasia | ↑ Cell number via mitosis | Hormonal (endometrial proliferation), compensatory (liver regeneration) |
Atrophy | ↓ Cell size and function under diminished demand | Ubiquitin‑proteasome degradation of proteins (e.g., disuse muscle atrophy) |
Metaplasia | Reversible change of one differentiated cell type to another | Chronic irritation in smokers: columnar → squamous epithelium |
1.3 Mechanisms of Reversible Injury
ATP Depletion: Impairs Na⁺/K⁺‑ATPase → cellular swelling; Ca²⁺ pump failure → intracellular Ca²⁺ rise.
Membrane Alterations: Increased permeability, blebbing, detachment of ribosomes.
Mitochondrial Swelling: Due to permeability transition pore opening; reversible if brief.
ER Swelling & Ribosomal Detachment: ↓ protein synthesis; clumping of chromatin.
1.4 Mechanisms of Irreversible Injury & Cell Death
1.4.1 Necrosis
Morphology: Loss of membrane integrity, enzymatic digestion, inflammation.
Patterns:
Coagulative (ischemic heart)—preserved architecture, “ghost cells.”
Liquefactive (brain infarct, abscess)—tissue softens into liquid.
Caseous (TB)—cheese‑like necrotic debris.
Fat (pancreatitis)—fat saponification in peripancreatic fat.
Gangrenous—extremity ischemia, may be wet (superinfection) or dry.
1.4.2 Apoptosis
Morphology: Cell shrinkage, chromatin condensation, membrane blebs, apoptotic bodies phagocytosed without inflammation.
Pathways:
Intrinsic (Mitochondrial): BAX/BAK activation → cytochrome c release → caspase‑9 → caspase cascade.
Extrinsic (Death Receptor): FasL or TNF binds receptor → DISC formation → caspase‑8 activation.
Physiological Roles: Embryogenesis, lymphocyte selection, hormone‑dependent involution.
Pathological Roles: DNA damage (p53‑mediated), viral cytotoxicity, cancer therapeutics.
1.5 Role of Reactive Oxygen Species (ROS)
Sources: Mitochondrial leakage, NADPH oxidase, xanthine oxidase, P450 metabolism.
Targets: Lipid peroxidation, protein oxidation, DNA strand breaks.
Defense Mechanisms: Superoxide dismutase, catalase, glutathione peroxidase.
Pathological Implications: Ischemia–reperfusion injury, chemical toxicity (e.g., CCl₄), chronic inflammation.
1.6 Cellular Calcium Overload
Mechanism: Increased cytosolic Ca²⁺ activates phospholipases, proteases, endonucleases, ATPases.
Consequences: Membrane damage, cytoskeletal degradation, nuclear fragmentation.
1.7 Key Molecular Events in Cell Death
Mitochondrial Dysfunction → ATP depletion & ROS.
Membrane Damage → loss of osmotic balance.
Proteolysis & DNA Fragmentation → caspase activation (apoptosis) or lysosomal enzymes (necrosis).
1.8 Key Points for Exams
Differentiate reversible vs. irreversible injury by listing two morphological and two biochemical criteria each.
Compare necrosis and apoptosis in terms of mechanism, morphology, and inflammatory response.
Outline the intrinsic apoptotic pathway, naming at least three key proteins.
Explain how ROS generation contributes to cellular injury and name two antioxidant defenses.
Describe an example of cellular adaptation (e.g., hypertrophy) and its physiological trigger.
Unit 2: Acute & Chronic Inflammation
This unit examines the body’s inflammatory responses—rapid acute inflammation and prolonged chronic inflammation—detailing their cellular and molecular mechanisms, morphological features, outcomes, and therapeutic modulation.
2.1 Overview & Classification
Inflammation: Host response to tissue injury or infection, aiming to eliminate the cause, clear debris, and initiate repair.
Types:
Acute: Rapid onset, short duration (minutes–days), predominated by vascular changes and neutrophil influx.
Chronic: Insidious, prolonged (weeks–years), characterized by mononuclear cell infiltration, tissue destruction, and repair with fibrosis.
2.2 Acute Inflammation
2.2.1 Vascular Events
Vasodilation: Mediated by histamine, nitric oxide → increased blood flow → erythema and heat.
Increased Vascular Permeability: Endothelial contraction (histamine, bradykinin), direct injury, leukocyte‑mediated damage → protein‑rich exudate (edema).
2.2.2 Cellular Events
Margination & Rolling: Neutrophils tether and roll along endothelium via selectins (E‑, P‑selectin).
Adhesion & Transmigration: Integrins (LFA‑1) bind ICAM‑1; neutrophils migrate through interendothelial junctions.
Chemotaxis: Directed migration along gradients of IL‑8, C5a, LTB₄.
Phagocytosis & Killing: Recognition (opsonins: IgG, C3b), engulfment into phagolysosomes, microbial killing by ROS and lysosomal enzymes.
2.2.3 Chemical Mediators
Mediator | Source | Actions |
---|---|---|
Histamine | Mast cells, basophils | Vasodilation, ↑ permeability |
Prostaglandins | COX‑derived from arachidonic acid | Vasodilation, pain, fever |
Leukotrienes | 5‑LOX pathway | Chemotaxis (LTB₄), bronchospasm (LTC₄, LTD₄, LTE₄) |
Cytokines (TNF, IL‑1) | Macrophages, endothelial cells | Fever, endothelial activation, acute‑phase protein synthesis |
Complement (C3a, C5a) | Plasma | Anaphylatoxin (C3a), chemotaxis/opsonization (C5a) |
Platelet‑Activating Factor | Leukocytes, endothelium | Vasodilation, permeability, leukocyte activation |
2.2.4 Outcomes of Acute Inflammation
Complete Resolution: Removal of stimulus, restoration of tissue architecture.
Suppuration & Abscess Formation: Localized pus collection if neutrophils predominate.
Chronic Inflammation: Persistence of injurious agent or inability to degrade debris.
Fibrosis & Scarring: When injury is severe or in tissues incapable of regeneration.
2.3 Chronic Inflammation
2.3.1 Cellular Composition & Morphology
Mononuclear Infiltrate: Macrophages, lymphocytes, plasma cells.
Tissue Destruction: Mediated by persistent offending agents and inflammatory cells.
Repair & Fibrosis: Angiogenesis and fibroblast activation lead to collagen deposition.
2.3.2 Granulomatous Inflammation
Definition: Focal collection of activated (epithelioid) macrophages often with multinucleated giant cells and a lymphocyte collar.
Types:
Immune Granulomas: Driven by Th1 response and IFN‑γ (e.g., tuberculosis).
Foreign Body Granulomas: Induced by inert material (sutures, talc) without T‑cell involvement.
2.3.3 Mediators & Regulation
Macrophage‑Derived: IL‑1, TNF, IL‑12 promote inflammation and granuloma formation.
T‑Cell‑Derived: IFN‑γ activates macrophages; IL‑4, IL‑13 promote alternative (wound‑healing) macrophage phenotype.
Matrix Metalloproteinases (MMPs): Secreted by macrophages to remodel extracellular matrix.
2.4 Systemic Manifestations (Acute‑Phase Response)
Fever: Pyrogens (IL‑1, TNF) act on hypothalamus via PGE₂.
Leukocytosis: Neutrophilia in acute, lymphocytosis in chronic.
Acute‑Phase Proteins: Hepatic synthesis of CRP, fibrinogen, serum amyloid A.
Sepsis & SIRS: Dysregulated cytokine storm leading to hypotension, coagulopathy, organ dysfunction.
2.5 Pharmacological Modulation
Drug Class | Targets | Clinical Use |
---|---|---|
NSAIDs | COX‑1/2 inhibitors | Analgesia, antipyresis, mild anti‑inflammatory |
Glucocorticoids | NF‑κB inhibition; cytokine suppression | Autoimmune diseases, asthma, transplant rejection |
Anti‑TNF Agents | Neutralize TNF‑α (e.g., infliximab) | Rheumatoid arthritis, IBD |
Leukotriene Modifiers | 5‑LOX inhibitors (zileuton), receptor antagonists (montelukast) | Asthma |
Anti‑histamines | H₁ receptor antagonists | Allergies |
2.6 Key Points for Exams
Compare vascular vs. cellular events in acute inflammation, naming one mediator for each.
Outline the steps of leukocyte extravasation and the adhesion molecules involved.
Describe granuloma structure and name two causes of granulomatous inflammation.
List three acute‑phase proteins and their functions.
Explain how corticosteroids attenuate both acute and chronic inflammation.
Unit 3: Hemodynamic Disorders – Edema, Thrombosis & Shock
This unit examines disturbances in normal blood flow and fluid balance—namely edema, thrombus formation, and shock—detailing their pathophysiology, clinical manifestations, and therapeutic approaches.
3.1 Fundamentals of Hemodynamics
Normal Fluid Compartments:
Intravascular (plasma), interstitial, and intracellular spaces.
Plasma volume ≈ 5 L; interstitial ≈ 10–12 L; intracellular ≈ 25 L.
Starling Forces govern fluid exchange across capillaries:
Hydrostatic Pressure (P) pushes fluid out of the capillary.
Oncotic (Colloid Osmotic) Pressure (π) draws fluid into the capillary (primarily albumin).
Net Filtration = (Pc – Pi) – (πc – πi).
Small shifts in any component can cause abnormal fluid accumulation (edema).
3.2 Edema
3.2.1 Definition & Types
Edema: Excess fluid in the interstitial or serous cavities.
Localized (e.g., inflammatory edema, lymphatic obstruction).
Generalized (Anasarca): systemic (heart failure, nephrotic syndrome).
3.2.2 Pathogenetic Mechanisms
Mechanism | Cause Examples |
---|---|
↑ Capillary Hydrostatic Pressure | Heart failure, venous obstruction (DVT, cirrhosis) |
↓ Plasma Oncotic Pressure | Hypoalbuminemia (nephrotic syndrome, malnutrition) |
↑ Capillary Permeability | Inflammation, burns, allergic reactions |
Lymphatic Obstruction | Surgical removal (mastectomy), filariasis |
Sodium & Water Retention | Renal failure, excess aldosterone |
3.2.3 Clinical Features & Sites
Pitting Edema: Pressing leaves a pit (e.g., CHF).
Non‑Pitting Edema: Lymphatic (e.g., lymphedema).
Effusions:
Pleural (hydrothorax), pericardial (hydropericardium), peritoneal (ascites).
3.3 Thrombosis
3.3.1 Definition & Virchow’s Triad
Thrombus: Intravascular coagulum of platelets, fibrin, erythrocytes.
Virchow’s Triad:
Endothelial Injury: Atherosclerosis, trauma, hypertension.
Abnormal Blood Flow: Stasis (immobility), turbulence.
Hypercoagulability: Genetic (Factor V Leiden), acquired (malignancy, OCPs).
3.3.2 Thrombus Formation & Growth
Initiation: Platelet adhesion to exposed subendothelium.
Propagation: Fibrin deposition, recruitment of red cells (“red thrombus”) or platelets (“white thrombus”).
Fate:
Propagation: enlarges thrombus.
Embolization: detaches → travels to distant site.
Dissolution: fibrinolysis (plasmin).
Organization & Recanalization: ingrowth of endothelium and smooth muscle.
3.3.3 Clinical Consequences
Arterial Thrombosis: MI, stroke, limb ischemia.
Venous Thrombosis: DVT → pulmonary embolism.
Microvascular Thrombosis: DIC → multi‑organ failure.
3.4 Shock
3.4.1 Definition & Classification
Shock: Global hypoperfusion leading to cellular dysfunction and organ failure.
Types:
Hypovolemic: ↓ intravascular volume (hemorrhage, dehydration).
Cardiogenic: Pump failure (MI, arrhythmias).
Distributive: Maldistribution of flow (septic, anaphylactic, neurogenic).
Obstructive: Impeded flow (cardiac tamponade, massive PE).
3.4.2 Pathophysiology & Stages
Initial: Compensation via tachycardia, vasoconstriction, RAAS activation.
Progressive: Tissue hypoxia → anaerobic metabolism → lactic acidosis, cell injury.
Irreversible: Widespread cellular death, multi‑organ dysfunction, refractory hypotension.
3.4.3 Cellular & Molecular Changes
Mitochondrial Dysfunction → ↓ ATP, ROS generation.
Endothelial Activation → ↑ permeability, leukocyte adhesion.
Inflammatory Mediators (TNF, IL‑1) amplify injury in septic shock.
3.5 Therapeutic Approaches
Disorder | Treatment Strategies |
---|---|
Edema | Diuretics (furosemide, spironolactone); compression; salt restriction |
Thrombosis | Anticoagulants (heparin, warfarin, DOACs); antiplatelets (aspirin, clopidogrel); thrombolytics (tPA) |
Shock |
Hypovolemic: Crystalloids, blood products, correct hemorrhage
Cardiogenic: Inotropes (dobutamine), diuretics, revascularization
Septic: Broad‑spectrum antibiotics, fluid resuscitation, vasopressors (norepinephrine)
Anaphylactic: Epinephrine IM, antihistamines, corticosteroids |
3.6 Key Points for Exams
Explain Starling forces and how each imbalance leads to edema.
List Virchow’s triad components and give one example of each.
Compare arterial vs. venous thrombi in composition and clinical outcome.
Outline the compensatory mechanisms in early shock and their failure in progressive shock.
Match each shock type with its primary therapeutic intervention.