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Histopathology Introduction To Pathology: A Seeing For Oneself

Pathology is the study of structural and functional changes in cells, tissues, and organs that underlie disease. It involves examining these changes through microscopy, autopsies, biopsies and other diagnostic tests. Pathology has two main divisions - general pathology, which studies basic cellular reactions to abnormal stimuli in all diseases, and systemic pathology, which examines specialized organ and tissue responses. Key areas of pathology include gross pathology, microscopic pathology, anatomic pathology, and clinical pathology. Clinical pathology utilizes tests of bodily fluids and tissues to diagnose and monitor diseases.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
173 views4 pages

Histopathology Introduction To Pathology: A Seeing For Oneself

Pathology is the study of structural and functional changes in cells, tissues, and organs that underlie disease. It involves examining these changes through microscopy, autopsies, biopsies and other diagnostic tests. Pathology has two main divisions - general pathology, which studies basic cellular reactions to abnormal stimuli in all diseases, and systemic pathology, which examines specialized organ and tissue responses. Key areas of pathology include gross pathology, microscopic pathology, anatomic pathology, and clinical pathology. Clinical pathology utilizes tests of bodily fluids and tissues to diagnose and monitor diseases.

Uploaded by

Daena Timtiman
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We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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HISTOPATHOLOGY

Introduction to Pathology
DEFINITION OF TERMS:

 Pathology
 From Greek, Pathos = pain & Logos = word
 Also called Pathobiology
 Bridging discipline of basic science and clinical practice
 Study of structural and functional changes in cells, tissues, and organs that underlie disease.
 Aspects of disease forming core of pathology:
 Etiology/Cause
 Pathogenesis/Mech. of development
 Morphologic changes/structural alterations
 Clinical significance/functional consequences
 Microscope
 Important in detecting tissue changes, esp.in the examination of small sections of tissue removed for
diagnosis
 Pathogenesis
 The development of a disease or morbid condition
 Pathologist
 A physician who interprets & diagnoses the changes cause by disease in the body
 A specialist physician expert in the origin & progress of disease & the microscopic analysis of body
tissues
 A physician who studies all aspects of disease with an emphasis on the nature, causes, & the
development of abnormal conditions, as well as the structural & functional changes that result from
disease processes
 The laboratory expert behind the front line clinical team.
 Medical Technologist
 An allied health profession who performs diagnostic analysis on:
 Human blood
 Urine
 Body fluids:
 Cerebrospinal fluid  Pericardial fluid
 Peritoneal fluid  Synovial fluid
 Other specimens:
 Stool
 Sputum
 Autopsy
 In greek: A seeing for oneself , Auto-, auto + opsis , sight
 AKA necropsy, post-mortem examination.
 Systematic examination of a cadaver for study or for determining the cause of death
 Uses of any methodical procedures to determine the etiology & pathogenesis of diseases, for
epidemiologic purposes for establishment or genetic causes, for family counsel, and for
improvement of safety standards for the living
 Biopsy
 Examination of cells or tissues from a living organisms
 Excised material may be studied in order to diagnose disease or to confirm findings of
normality
 Incisions may be made and total or partial lesions removed in form of wedges or
cylindrical pieces or scrapings of the surface membranes of internal organs may be
collected.
 Tumors are routinely biopsied in order to determine whether they are malignant or
benign.

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DIVISIONS OF PATHOLOGY
GENERAL PATHOLOGY SYSTEMIC PATHOLOGY
Description Basis reaction of cells and tissues to abnormal Specific responses of specialized organs and
stimuli that underlie all diseases tissues

 Gross pathology
 Anatomic pathology
 Clinical pathology

DECRIPTIONS OF DIVISIONS OF PATHOLOGY

 Gross pathology & microscopic pathology


 Gross pathology:
 Recognition of disease based on macroscopic exam of specimens from surgery or autopsy
 Microscopic pathology:
 Recognition of disease based on microscopic exam of specimens from surgery or autopsy

 Anatomic pathology
 Study of changes in the function, structure, or appearance of organs or tissues, including post
mortem examination and the study of biopsy specimens
 Division of Anatomic Pathologys:
 Surgical pathology
 The pathology of disease processes that are surgically accessible for diagnosis or
treatment
 The study of gross appearance and histology of tissues removed during surgery
 Autopsy pathology
 Involves external and internal examination of a human body after death
 The study of gross appearance and histology of tissues removed ff. death
o Most important task: Identify cause of death
 Exfoliative cytology
 Branch of general cytology which deals with the microscopic study of cells that
have been desquamated from the epithelial surfaces

 Clinical pathology
 Focused on diagnosing & monitoring of diseases through the examination of blood, body fluids,
secretions, & tissue biopsy specimens for chemical, morphological, microbiological &
immunological abnormalities.
 Identifies & interprets changes that characterize diff. diseases or disease states in cells, tissues, &
fluids of the body
 Monitor metabolic status of patients under medical therapy
 Decipher specific markers that characterize individual patients for purposes such as transfusions
or transplantations
 ! Subdivided into:
 Clinical chemistry including toxicology
 Hematology
 Blood banking including transfusion medicine
 Microbiology including immunology
 Clinical Immunology & Serology

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 Description per subdivisions of Clinical pathology
 Clinical Chemistry including Toxicology
 Biochemical analysis performed on human samples (Blood, Fluids & Tissues)
 Substances which could be assayed:
o Sugars o Hormone
o Lipids o Vitamins
o Proteins o Metals
o Ab o Electrolytes
o Enzymes
 Employed methods
o Spectrophotometry o Flame photometry
o Fluorometry o Ion selective eletrodes
o Enzyme kinetics o HPC
o Enzyme o Gas chromatography
immunoassay o Mass spectrometry
(EIA) o Atomic absorption spectrometry
o Electrophoresis

Most instruments are almost completely automated


In the toxicology subsection:
o Specimen are analysed for presence of drugs & substance abuse.
 An important application of toxicology testing:
o measure the blood levels of therapeutic drugs to assure that conc. are:
 Adequate to treat the disease
 But not so high as to cause toxic side effects
 Hematology
 assessment of the cellular elements (RBC, WBC, and platelets) in blood samples
 Blood cells may be enumerated, either by manual cell counting techniques or
automated particle sensing and sizing instruments.
 Microscopic examination of stained PBS is limited to assessing the morphology in
atypical cells as they may appear in cases of dysplastic syndromes and overt
leukemias.
 Hematopathologists examine bone marrow and lymph node biopsies, expert in
the field of anemia, leukemia, and lymphomas.
o In complicated cases, the diagnosis of a hematological disorder cannot be
made by study of the PBS, a bone marrow exam is done
 Blood banking including transfusion medicine
 Also called immunohematology
 Deals with collection, storage, compatibility and safety of blood with its various
components for the purpose of human transfusion
 Specific tasks include:
o Blood collection after donor screening
o Chemical and serological tests to exclude transmission of infective diseases
o Component preparation & proper storage
o Blood typing, screening for antibodies against red cells and compatibility
testing
o Immunophenotyping of blood cells
o Investigation into transfusion reaction
o Apheresis & plasmapheresis
 Procedure where plasma or platelets can be separated from the
withdraw blood and the formed elements (red cells and
platelets)
 Microbiology including immunology
 Involved in isolation, culture and identification of microorganisms in biological
samples
 In addition to conventional microscopic and biochemical methods for
identification, DNA/RNA based assays including PCR and Immunoassays are being
used.

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Subdivisions include:
o Bacteriology
o Parasitology
o Mycology
o Virology
 Presumptive identification of microbes can be made by microscopically examining
direct mounts of an appropriate portion of the specimen or thin smears that have
been stained with a variety of dyes
 Rapid presumptive diagnoses can also be made by directly testing specimens with
a variety of immunological rgts.
 Specimens are applied to the surface of a variety of agar culture media for the
purpose of recovering in pure culture any bacterial species that may be clinically
significant.
 Gram stains may determine the cellular morphology and staining characteristics of
the bacteria and a variety of rapid, direct tests can be performed to provide an
early identification
 The lab id of fugi and the diagnosis of fungal infections is similar to bacteria
 Specimens are inoculated on special fungal media, incubated for as long as 4
weeks, growth of mold or yeast is identified morphologically and biochemically.
 Nucleic acid pprobes are available to quickly confirm any fungus colony suspected
of being one of the dangerous pathogens
 The lab id of parasites involve microscopically detecting the typical forms in
bodyfluids and secretions
 Viruses can live only in viable cells and for most part, can survive briefly outside
human or animal hosts
 Culture techniques must use:
o embryonated eggs
o cell culture suspensions
o thin cell sheets called monolayers
 viruses are identified by observing their ability to produce certain cytopathic
effects in the cells where they are growing or to cause recognizable diseases in lab
animals
 Clinical immunology and serology
 Diagnoses infectious diseases by detecting antibodies in serum and other body
fluids
 Immunologic and serologic techniques are used to diagnose an infectious disease
when the agent may be too difficult to recover in culture

THE MEDICAL TECHNOLOGIST’S ROLE IN THE HEALTHCARE PROCESS


 to provide accurate results in a timely manner
 results will ultimately be used to help make a diagnosis or monitor treatment
 observe details of cells, ova and cysts of parasitic infections
 test whether the blood donor is compatible with the patient-recepient
 utilize special stains to identify microorganisms
 measure substances in blood and other body substance
 rgt preparation
 Collect specimen for study
 Preparation of specimen
 Quality control

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