Necrosis:
-
The more common type of cell death after exogenous stimuli, occurring
after such stresses as ischemia & chemical injury.
Manifestations:
- Severe cell swelling or cell rupture
-Denaturation & coagulation of cytoplasmic proteins
-Breakdown of cell organelles.
Coagulative necrosis
Liquefactive necrosis
Gangrenous necrosis
Fat necrosis
Fibrinoid necrosis
2. Liquefactive Necrosis
- Necrosis of big tissue with super added putrefaction, with black, foulsmelling appearance is known as liquefactive necrosis (black or green
color is due to breakdown of haemoglobin). In liquefactive necrosis,
digestion of dead cells leads to liquid mass (infections & hypoxic death in
CNS). Autolysis predominates resulting in liquified mass. Examples include
cerebral infarction and abscess. Brain cells secrete increased hydrolases.
These make neural tissue soft & liquid. Abscess hyrolases from neutrophils
liquefy tissue.
3. Gangrenous Necrosis
- It is the clinical term for ischemic necrosis of lower limb involving multiple
tissue planes with super added bacterial infections. Necrosis and
putrifaction by saprophytes takes place.
4. Caseous Necrosis
- It is cheese-like, as in tuberculosis.
5. Fat necrosis
- In fat necrosis, there is focal area of fat destruction (pancreatic lipase
digest cell membrane & form fatty acid + calcium white deposits).
6.
-
Fibrinoid necrosis
This is not a true degeneration but a strongly eosinophilic stain like fibrin.
Location: interstitial collagen and blood vessels (small artery and arteriole)
Nature: one kind of necrosis.