100% satisfaction guarantee Immediately available after payment Both online and in PDF No strings attached
logo-home
NSG5003 FINAL EXAM STUDY GUIDE / NSG 5003 FINAL EXAM STUDY GUIDE (LATEST- 2022): ADVANCED PATHOPHYSIOLOGY: SOUTH UNIVERSITY £12.58   Add to cart

Exam (elaborations)

NSG5003 FINAL EXAM STUDY GUIDE / NSG 5003 FINAL EXAM STUDY GUIDE (LATEST- 2022): ADVANCED PATHOPHYSIOLOGY: SOUTH UNIVERSITY

 6 views  0 purchase
  • Module
  • Institution

NSG5003 FINAL EXAM STUDY GUIDE / NSG 5003 FINAL EXAM STUDY GUIDE (LATEST- 2022): ADVANCED PATHOPHYSIOLOGY: SOUTH UNIVERSITY

Preview 4 out of 45  pages

  • February 22, 2022
  • 45
  • 2021/2022
  • Exam (elaborations)
  • Unknown
avatar-seller
NSG 5003 Advanced Pathophysiology Final Study Guide


Week 1

Cell & Tissue Function/Dysfunction
Atrophy: decrease in size of cells.
Hypertrophy: increase in cell size.
Hyperplasia: increase in number of cells.
Metaplasia: mature cell type is replaced by a different mature cell type.
Dysplasia: cells vary in size & shape within a tissue.
Anaplasia: undifferentiated cells with variable nuclear & cell structure.
Neoplasm: tumor.
Cell Damage
Ischemia: oxygen deficit due to respiratory or circulatory problems.
Hypoxia: reduced oxygen in tissue.
Oxygen Deficit: decreased energy production, loss of Na pump ↑ intracellular Na.
Temperature: inactivation of some enzymes, damages organelles, protein coagulation,
disruption of cell membrane.
Micro-organisms
Abnormal Metabolites: caused by genetic disorders or altered metabolism.
Nutritional Deficits
Cell Death
Apoptosis:programmed cell death controlled by genetics.
Necrosis:lysis of a cell, cell components leak into blood.
Liquification:dead cells liquefy due to release of enzymes.
Coagulation:cell proteins are altered or denatured causing coagulation.
Caseous:form of coagulation necrosis, thick, yellowish, cheesy.
Fat: fatty tissue is broken down into fatty acids.
Tissue Damage from Chemicals
Exogenous: from environment.
Endogenous: from inside the body,
Tissue Damage from Physical Agents
Hypothermia: vasoconstriction, ↑ blood viscosity, hypovolemic shock ↓ blood
pressure.
Hyperthermia: causes general vasodilatation, decrease in circulating blood
volume.
Radiation: primarily affects actively dividing cells
Biological Agents
Insects/Animals: direct injection of toxin, transmission of infectious agent,
allergic reaction to insect proteins.
Food Poisoning
Normal Defenses of the Body
1st Line Defense
Physical Barriers: unbroken skin, mucous membranes, nasal hair, clots.
Fluids: may contain enzymes or chemicals:saliva, tears, gastric, sweat.
2nd Line Defense-non-specific
1|Page

, Phagocytosis:neutrophils & macrophages engulf cells, debris, foreign mat.
Inflammation: automatic response to cell injury.
3rd Line Defense-specific defense produced by
Antibodies
Cell Mediated Immunity
Cellular Defenses
Mast Cells: located in tissue & release histamine & bradykinin.
Macrophages: monocytes that enter tissue & act as phagocytes.
Interferons: small proteins made by lymphocytes to prevent virus replication.
White Blood Cells
Granulocytes
Neutrophils: work by phagocytosis.
Basophils: release histamine leading to inflammation.
Eosinophils:combat the effects of histamine.
Agranulocytes
Monocytes:can enter tissue to become macrophages which
function as phagocyte.
Lymphocytes: B & T
Acute Inflammation
Vascular Response: vasodilatation & increased capillary permeability.
Cellular Response: migration of inflammatory cells through chemotaxis to injury site to
destroy ineffective organism, remove damaged cells,releasedinflammation mediators.
Exudate
Serous: watery, mostly fluids, some proteins and WBC’s.
Fibrinous: thick, sticky, high fibrin content.
Purulent: thick, yellow-green, contains leukocytes, cell debris & microorganisms.
Abscess: Pocket of purulent exudates or pus in a solid tissue.
Local Effects of Inflammation-Cardinal Signs of Inflammation
Redness & Warmth: due to increased blood flow to area.
Swelling: shift of protein & fluid into interstitial space.
Pain: pressure on free nerve endings, chemical mediators irritate nerves.
Loss of Function: edema may restrict movement.
Systemic Effects of Inflammation
Mild Fever: due to resetting of hypothalamic thermoregulatory setpoint, release of
endogenouspyrogens.
Malaise
Fatigue
Headache
Anorexia
Treatment of Inflammation: drugs may decrease capillary permeability, reduce number of
leukocytes & mast cells.

Types of Healing
Resolution: minimal tissue damage, cells can repair themselves.
Regeneration: damaged tissue is replaced by identical tissue.
Replacement: functional tissue replaced by scar or fibrous tissue.


2|Page

, 1st Intention: wound is clean, edges are close together with minimal gap.
2nd Intention: large break in tissue, longer healing process with more scar tissue.
Scar Formation: fibroblasts proliferate, abnormal amount of collagen.
Hypertrophic: overgrowth of fibrous tissue, keloid.
Ulceration: blood supply around scar is impaired resulting in tissue
breakdown.
Wound Staging
1. Partial thickness ulcer-red or pink ie.Sunburn.
2. Partial thickness ulcer-blister, scrape,abrasion.
3. Full thickness ulcer- throughdermis.
4. Full thickness ulcer that includes muscle orbone.
Drainage
Transudate: clear & watery.
Serosanginous: clear w/ tinge of red/brown. Contains serum/blood thin & watery.
Exudate: creamy yellowish. Contains proteins & WBC’s Thick.
Purulent: yellowish. Contains leukocytes and necrotic debris, thick.
Infected Pus: hues of yellow, green or blue. Contains pathogens, thick.
Venous Insufficiency ClinicalPresentation
IncompetentValves medial legarea
InefficientCalfPump edema
DistendedCapillaryBed wet wound
DecreasedFibrolysis scaring, red base
FibrinLeakage hemosiderin deposits(purple/brown on leg)
Trauma Ulcer
Documentation of Pulses
Normal: 2+
Diminished: 1+
Absent: 0
Arterial Insufficiency: decreased arterial bloodsupply.
Acute(thrombosis) vs Chronic(arteriosclerosis)
Characteristics
Dry Gangrene: nonviable dry tissue.
Wet Gangrene: tissue necrosis + bacterial infection. Drainage w/ odor.
Black Gangrene: gangrenous borders, mummified skin.
Pain w/ walking=Claudication
Skin is atrophic(no hair) slow nail growth & Diminished Pulse
Ankle Pressure Index: SBP LE/SBP UE
>1 no arterial occlusivedisease
.9-1 min sx in LE
.5-.9 claudication pain(leg pain w/walking)
.3-.5 ischemic restpain
<.3 ischemic w/ tissuenecrosis
Assessment of arterial flow, skin color w/ elevation/dependency
1. LE Elevation to 60º for 1 minute. Normal=no color change.
2. Lower the LE & record time for color toreturn.>30seconds
means arterial insufficiency. Will look hyperemic(brightred).

3|Page

, Week 2
Immune Response-Third Body Defense
Humeral Immunity: antibodies are produced to protect body & stored in blood.
Cell Mediated Immunity:lymphocytes are programmed to attack non-self cells.
Antigens:immunogens, proteins, polysaccharides, glycoproteins on cell surface.
Cells
Macrophages:present throughout the body, derived from monocytes,
initiate immune response, engulf foreign materialprocess & display
foreign antigens & present them to lymphocytes, secrete monokines &
interleukins .
Lymphocytes:primary cell in immune response,
T: has 3 subgroups made in bone marrow & differentiate in
thymus, cell mediated immunity, can target certain cells.
1.Cytotoxic T:cells destroy cells bind to antigen & release enzymes
2.Helper T: facilitate immune response by activating & regulating
3.Memory T: remember antigens.
B:Made in bone marrow, located in spleen & lymphoid tissue,
produce antibodies.
Natural Killer:kill tumor or virus infected cells w/o prior exposure
Antibodies
IgG:most common, can activate compliment, cross placenta, primary &
secondary immune response.
IgM:can activate compliment, natural antibodies ie. Involved in blood type
IgA:not in blood, is in tears, saliva & colostrums.
IgE
IgD
Compliment System:antigen-antibody complex, activated during immune rxn w/ IgG or
IgM. Causes cell damage when activated, causes macrophagestorelease enzymes.
Immune Response
Primary: 1st exposure to antigen, 1-2 weeks needed for effective antibodies
Secondary:repeat exposure to same antigen, effective response in 1-3 days
Immunity: Innate-always present. Or acquired.
Hypersensitivity Reactions
Type 1 Hypersensitivity:allergic rxn, exposed to allergen causes development of
IgE’s,activate mast cells and causes inflammation. Ie. Hay fever, allergies, asthma
Type 2 Hypersensitivity:cytotoxic hypersensitivity. Antigen oncellmembrane reacts
w/ circulating IgG’s, activates compliment, cells w/ antigen destroyed. Ie incompatible blood
type exposure.
Type 3: Immune complex hypersensitivity-antigen & antibody combine forming
immune complexes that cause inflammation & tissue destruction.
Type 4:Cell Mediated or delayed response by T-lymphocytes. No antibodies
present. Ie. Tb test, contact dermatitis.

Immune System Malfunction
Hypersensitivity: full system immune response to non-noxious stimulus.
Asthma: central windpipe or airway disorder.
4|Page

The benefits of buying summaries with Stuvia:

Guaranteed quality through customer reviews

Guaranteed quality through customer reviews

Stuvia customers have reviewed more than 700,000 summaries. This how you know that you are buying the best documents.

Quick and easy check-out

Quick and easy check-out

You can quickly pay through credit card for the summaries. There is no membership needed.

Focus on what matters

Focus on what matters

Your fellow students write the study notes themselves, which is why the documents are always reliable and up-to-date. This ensures you quickly get to the core!

Frequently asked questions

What do I get when I buy this document?

You get a PDF, available immediately after your purchase. The purchased document is accessible anytime, anywhere and indefinitely through your profile.

Satisfaction guarantee: how does it work?

Our satisfaction guarantee ensures that you always find a study document that suits you well. You fill out a form, and our customer service team takes care of the rest.

Who am I buying these notes from?

Stuvia is a marketplace, so you are not buying this document from us, but from seller HIGHGRADE. Stuvia facilitates payment to the seller.

Will I be stuck with a subscription?

No, you only buy these notes for £12.58. You're not tied to anything after your purchase.

Can Stuvia be trusted?

4.6 stars on Google & Trustpilot (+1000 reviews)

75323 documents were sold in the last 30 days

Founded in 2010, the go-to place to buy revision notes and other study material for 14 years now

Start selling

Recently viewed by you


£12.58
  • (0)
  Add to cart