What Is Myonecrosis?
Necrosis is the death of local tissue cells in the living body characterized by changes in enzyme solubility. Necrosis can be directly caused by strong pathogenic factors, but most of them develop from reversible damage, and their basic manifestations are cell swelling, organelle disintegration and protein degeneration. During inflammation, lysosomal enzymes are released from necrotic cells and neutrophils exuding from surrounding cells. Can promote the further occurrence of necrosis and local parenchymal cell lysis, so necrosis often involves multiple cells at the same time. [1-2]
- Necrosis is the death of local tissue cells in the living body characterized by changes in enzyme solubility. Necrosis can be directly caused by strong pathogenic factors, but most of them develop from reversible damage, and their basic manifestations are cell swelling, organelle disintegration and protein degeneration. Necrotic cells and surrounding exudates during inflammation
- The death of local tissue cells in vivo, characterized by changes in enzyme solubility, becomes necrosis. [1]
- Due to the different role of enzyme degradation or protein denaturation, different morphological changes in necrotic tissues are usually divided into three basic types: coagulation necrosis, liquefaction necrosis and cellulose-like necrosis. In addition, there are some special types of necrosis such as caseous necrosis, fat necrosis and gangrene. Tissue necrosis is pale in color, loses the elasticity of normal tissues, loses normal sensation (skin pain, tenderness) and motor function, and has no pulsation of blood. When inactivating tissue is removed during debridement, no fresh blood flows out of the blood vessels. This type of tissue is called inactivated tissue and should be removed in time.
- Necrotic cells and peripherally exuding neutrophils release lysosomal enzymes. It can promote the further occurrence of necrosis and local parenchymal cell lysis, so necrosis often involves multiple cells at the same time, and causes inflammation of the tissue, which in turn causes more serious consequences. [1]
| Necrosis |
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| Pathological changes or severe injuries |
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| Large tracts of tissue or clusters of cells |
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| damaged |
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| Flocculent |
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| Swelling, disintegration of the endoplasmic reticulum |
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| Swelling becomes larger |
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| None, cells are autolysed, residual debris is engulfed by macrophages |
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| Randomly degraded, smeared electrophoresis |
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| no |
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| Passive |
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| Yes, release contents |
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- Note: Source of form reference [3] [5-6]