Cell Necrosis
Irreversible injury to cells as a result of encounters with noxious stimuli invariably leads to cell death. Such noxious stimuli include infectious agents (bacteria, viruses, fungi, parasites), oxygen deprivation or hypoxia, and extreme environmental conditions such as heat, radiation, or exposure to ultraviolet irradiation. The resulting death is known as necrosis, a term that is usually distinguished from the other major consequence of irreversible injury, known as cell death by apoptosis. Apoptosis is a programmed or organized cell death which could be physiological or pathological. Additional information regarding this form of cell death is outside of the scope of this chapter. Necrosis as a form of cell death is almost always associated with a pathological process.
When cells die by necrosis, they exhibit two major types of microscopes or macroscopic appearance. The first is liquefactive necrosis, also known as colliquative necrosis, is characterized by partial or complete dissolution of dead tissue and transformation into a liquid, viscous mass. The loss of tissue and cellular profile occurs within hours in liquefactive necrosis. In contrast to liquefactive necrosis, coagulative necrosis, the other major pattern, is characterized by the maintenance of normal architecture of necrotic tissue for several days after cell death.
Liquefaction derives from the slimy, liquid-like nature of tissues undergoing liquefactive necrosis. This morphological appearance is attributable in part to the activities of hydrolytic enzymes which causes dissolution of cellular organelles in a cell undergoing necrosis. The enzymes responsible for liquefaction are derived from either bacterial hydrolytic enzymes or lysosomal hydrolytic enzymes.[1][2][3]
Other types of Necrosis
In addition to liquefactive and coagulative necrosis, the other morphological patterns associated with cell death by necrosis are:
The other types of necrosis listed above do not represent distinct pathological entities. Rather, they are descriptive terms that are widely used to describe necrosis occurring in specific clinical scenarios or organ damage.
Coagulative
This is the default pattern of necrosis associated with ischemia or hypoxia in every organ in the body except the brain.[4][5]
Liquefactive
The pattern of necrosis seen with infections. Also, the pattern is seen following ischemic injury in the brain. While the reason for liquefactive necrosis following ischemic injury in the brain is poorly understood, the release of digestive enzymes and constituents of neutrophils is the reason for liquefaction in infections.[6][7]
Caseous
A unique type of cell death seen with tuberculosis.
Fat Necrosis
Fat necrosis occurs from acute inflammation affecting tissues with numerous adipocytes such as pancreas and breast tissue. Damaged cells release digestive enzymes which break down lipids to generate free fatty acids.
Fibrinoid Necrosis
This is a pattern associated with vascular damage (autoimmunity, immune-complex deposition, infections (viruses, spirochetes, rickettsiae)).
Gangrenous Necrosis
Clinical use, to describe ischemic necrosis of the lower limbs.(sometimes upper limbs or digits).
These all represents morphological patterns which are visible grossly and microscopically. Fibrinoid necrosis is usually visible only microscopically. We discuss the characteristic gross and microscopic findings in liquefactive necrosis in subsequent paragraphs.
Patterns of necrosis (liquefactive or coagulative) are determined by the cause of cell death, organ affected, and duration of cell death.
Liquefactive necrosis is a pattern of cell death caused by several etiological factors.
The major causes of liquefactive necrosis are:
In all solid organs of the body:
In the brain
Liquefactive Necrosis
Three major factors contribute to liquefactive necrosis:
Because infectious agents are rich in digestive enzymes and likely to elicit an inflammatory response, they can bring about the process of cellular digestion rapidly. This manifests as liquefactive necrosis. Cellular dissolution and digestion are brought about by several enzymes some from the infecting organism and some from the lysosome of the dying cells.
Enzymes involved in liquefaction includes:
Coagulative Necrosis
A major difference between liquefactive and coagulative necrosis is the fact that in liquefactive necrosis, the enzyme system of the necrotic tissue is intact and can commence the process of cellular digestion almost immediately via autolysis. In addition to self-digestion (autolysis), heterolysis occurs as a result of a release of enzymes and inflammatory cells from the invading organism.
In coagulative necrosis, cellular digestion is principally dependent on heterolysis since a hypoxic injury would have damaged the enzymes of the cell undergoing ischemic necrosis. This partly explains the late onset of digestion and removal of dead tissues in this type of necrosis.
Caseous Necrosis
This pattern is almost unique to tuberculosis. Certain fungi can also exhibit caseous necrosis. In tuberculosis, the organism is partially resistant to digestion and phagocytosis by tissue macrophages, and this leads to activation of the macrophages to form giant cells and epithelioid cells. This sets off several steps which lead to recruitment of more macrophages and inflammatory cells and production of cytokines and slow degradation of the mycobacteria. Mycolic acid and other lipid constituent of the mycobacteria cell wall confers a characteristic "cheese-like" appearance on the tubercle of tuberculosis hence the descriptive term,"caseous."
Fat Necrosis
The release of lipases and amylases from the pancreatic cells is the major trigger for fat necrosis in the pancreas. This processed is usually triggered by several factors leading to inflammation of the pancreas, otherwise known as pancreatitis. Causes of acute pancreatitis include alcohol, gall bladder stones, poisoning, and insect bites. Since fat necrosis in the pancreas is triggered by an inadvertent release of enzymes, this process is also referred to as enzymatic fat necrosis. Breast tissues can also give rise to fat necrosis. The trigger for this is usually trauma.
Fibrinoid Necrosis
This is a pattern which not grossly discernible but can be seen microscopically. Fibrinoid necrosis is a pattern of cell death characterized by endothelial damage and exudation of plasma proteins (especially fibrin).
Gangrenous Necrosis
See description in the introduction above. Not a true pathological type, rather, it is a clinical term describing coagulative necrosis (dry gangrene) or sometimes liquefactive necrosis (wet gangrene) affecting the extremities.
Clinical Examples of Necrosis
Infections
Hypoxic Injury
Cerebrovascular accident (Stroke) (liquefactive necrosis)
Acute Tubular Necrosis (Kidneys) (coagulative necrosis)
Acute Myocardial infarction (coagulative necrosis)
Appropriate history and physical examination findings would guide diagnosis and management including which evaluation studies to order.
Liquefactive necrosis closely mirrors acute inflammation and response to an infectious process. The only exemption is in the brain where liquefaction may occur in response to ischemia.
Evaluation and management are geared toward effective clinical management which could be medical with either antibiotics or surgical management.
Hypoxic injury is the cause of coagulative necrosis. Re-establishment of blood flow or oxygen supply is reperfusion. This is important for management. Hence, for this pattern of tissue damage, studies such as Doppler ultrasound are useful to determine blood flow.
Useful evaluation includes:
Management of Infectious Processes
Antibiotics are the mainstay of managing infectious processes.[8][9][10]
The choice of antibiotic would be guided by clinical findings and antibiotic susceptibility.
Surgical management is also often indicated and includes:
Management of Ischemic Processes/Stroke
Management of Caseous Necrosis
This requires standard management for tuberculosis, including the use of combination antibiotics and close laboratory and clinical monitoring.
Management of Gangrenous Necrosis
This is a serious medical and surgical situation which requires antibiotics and sometimes necessitates the removal of dead tissues (debridement). In severe, life-threatening cases, an amputation may be required.
There are several types of necrotic processes that occur following injury or an infection. The final diagnosis of the type of necrosis is made by the pathologist. Sometimes patients may need to be referred to the surgeon or radiologist for aspiration or debridement of the necrotic tissues. Often radical debridement is required in cases of fournier gangrene and the patient and family should be notified about the possibility of a stoma. If time permits, a stoma nurse should visit patients who are about to undergo an abdominal procedure for gangrene or necrosis.
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