Essential physiologic process performed by the body once its integrity is compromised by wearing and tearing.
Enables the affected parts to regenerate its component in order to regain the structure and perform optimum function towards the overall well-being of an individual.
Wound healing
Intact physical barriers
INFLAMMATION - a general (nonspecific) body response that attempts to prevent further injury.
IMMUNERESPONSE - extremely specific, mounts a vigorous attack against recognized invaders, including bacteria, viruses, and toxins.
Tissue repair
2 major ways of tissue repair
regeneration
fibrosis (repaired with scar)
Replacement of destroyed tissue by the samekind of cells.
regeneration
Repair by dense (fibrous) connective tissue, that is, by the formation of scar tissue
WHICH OCCURS DEPENDS ON:
The type of tissue damaged
Severity of the injury
Clean cuts (incisions) heal much more successfully than ragged tears of the tissue
fibrosis
Note that these two (regeneration and fibrosis) occurs depending on the:
Type of tissue damaged
Severity of the injury.
Events of tissue repair
Inflammation
Formation of granulationtissue
Regeneration and fibrosis effect permanent repair
Injured tissue cells release inflammatory chemicals that make the capillaries very permeable.
Vasodilation (dilation of blood vessels) occurs so that clotting proteins and other substances can seep into the injured area creating a clot that stops bloodloss.
Inflammation
Granulation Tissue: delicate pink tissue composed largely of new capillaries that grow into the damaged area from undamaged blood vessels.
Contains phagocytes that disposes of the blood clot
Has fibroblasts that produce the building blocks of collagen fibers (scar tissue) to permanently bridge the gap.
Rebuilding of collagenfibers.
Formation of Granulation Tissue
The scab soon detaches, and the final result is a fully regenerated surface epithelium that covers an underlying area of fibrosis (the scar).
Composition of Scar: Denseconnectivetissue and is invisible, or visible as a thin white line, depending on the severity of the wound.
Regeneration and Fibrosis Effect Permanent Repair
Epithelial Tissue
Fibrous Connective Tissues
Bone
Tissues that Regenerate Easily
skeletal muscle
Tissues that Regenerate Poorly
CardiacMuscle
Nervous Tissue within the brain and spinal cord.
Tissues that are Replaced with Scar Tissue (Fibrosis)
Modifications of cells and tissues
neoplasms
hyperplasia
atrophy
Abnormal cell growths (benign or cancerous); result from lack of control of cell division.
neoplasms
Increase in size (of a tissue or organ); results when tissue is repeatedly and strongly stimulated or irritated.
hyperplasia
Decrease in size (of a tissue or organ); results when the organ is not stimulated normally.
atrophy
Developmental aspects of cells and tissues
Growth through cell division continues through puberty.
Cell populations exposed to friction (such as epithelium) replace lost cells throughout life.
Connective tissue remains mitotic and forms repair (scar) tissue.
With some exceptions, muscle tissue becomes amitotic by the end of puberty.
Developmental aspects of cells and tissues
Nervous tissue becomes amitotic shortly after birth.
Neurons do not have centrioles that have a significant function in cell division, this fact is consistent with the amitotic nature of the cell.
They are protected from damage by the glialcell.
Injury can severely handicap amitotic tissues.
Ex: paralysis due to spinal cord injury
The cause of aging is unknown, but chemical and physical insults, as well as genetic programming, have been proposed as possible causes.