Difference between revisions of "Liver Necrosis"
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[[Category:Liver_-_General_Pathology]] | [[Category:Liver_-_General_Pathology]] | ||
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Revision as of 13:34, 12 February 2011
Causes
- severe metabolic disturbances [as seen in degenerative pathology link?]
- toxic substances [link?]
- nutritional deficiencies
- action of micro-organisms
Histological patterns
- Liver cell necrosis has been classified on an anatomic basis with reference to the distribution of the lesion
Random foci (focal)
- microscopic foci of necrosis not related to any particular part of the liver lobule
- can be due to a variety of insults
- systemic viral, bacterial,and parasitic infections
- result of bacteria being absorbed from the gut
- examples
- Equine herpes virus infection
- in aborted foetuses
- Salmonellosis
- in calves
- Toxoplasmosis (miliary)
- in dogs and cats
- Equine herpes virus infection
Zonal necrosis
- necrosis occurring mainly in a part of the lobule and further subdivided according to whether the lesions are situated centrally, peripherally, or in the mid-zone of the lobule
- due to anoxia
Periacinar (centrilobular)
- most common
- main reason is because the hepatocytes in this zone are furthest away from the incoming blood supply
- therefore less oxygenated and relatively anoxic
- reported to contain the greatest number of enzymes responsible for metabolising sunstances to more toxic metabolites capable of killing the hepatocytes
- hypoxic states and toxic substances predominate in this type of necrosis
- some viral conditions cause this necrosis
- eg Infectious Canine Hepatitis
- poisons
- eg carbon tetrachloride
Midzonal
- rare
- in pigs with alfatoxicosis
- 'Yellow Fever' in man
Periportal (centroacinar)
- rare
- eg phosphorous poisoning
Massive necrosis
- necrosis of large areas of liver cells comprising many lobules (complete acinus or several acini) and sometimes involving almost the whole organ
- some cases of ICH infection or carbon tetrachloride poisoning, the severity of the injury replacing the zonal pattern
Subacute cytolytic necrosis
- a condition in the dog
- aetiology is entirely unknown
- Clinical
- acute abdominal pain
- collapse
- invariably jaundice
- Gross
- Liver is normal or reduced in size
- Microscopically
- severe necrosis
Hepatosis dietica
- similar condition to subacute cytolytic necrosis
- occurs in rapidly growing pigs
- related to diet
- fed on large quantities of grain concentrates
- poor quality or low quantity protein supplements
- Cause
- nutritional deficiencies of selenium and Vitamin E, and probably amino acids
- triggering mechanism is environmental stress