Home > B. Cellular pathology > cellular swelling
cellular swelling
Monday 30 January 2006
Cellular swelling is the first manifestation of almost all forms of injury to cells. It is a difficult morphologic change to appreciate with the light microscope; it may be more apparent at the level of the whole organ.
When it affects many cells in an organ, it causes some pallor, increased turgor, and increase in weight of the organ. On microscopic examination, small clear vacuoles may be seen within the cytoplasm; these represent distended and pinched-off segments of the endoplasmic reticulum. This pattern of nonlethal injury is sometimes called hydropic change or vacuolar degeneration. Swelling of cells is reversible.
The ultrastructural changes of reversible cell injury include:
plasma membrane alterations
- blebbing
- blunting
- distortion of microvilli
creation of myelin figures
loosening of intercellular attachments
mitochondrial changes
- mitochondrial swelling
- mitochondrial rarefaction
- appearance of small phospholipid-rich amorphous densities
dilation of the endoplasmic reticulum
- detachment
- disaggregation of polysomes
nuclear alterations - disaggregation of granular and fibrillar elements
Example
hepatocyte swelling