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| Fatty Metamorphosis | ||
| Etiology Alcohol is the most common cause. Toxic, metabolic and hypoxic conditions of all types. | ||
| Pathogenesis Liver is the principle organ of fat metabolism and synthesis. Interference with mobilizing triglycerides out of the liver is the usual mechanism. This happens when toxins or agents affect the mitochondrial and microsomal functions resulting in defective oxidation of fatty acids and aberrant mitochondrial function. Factors casuing fatty change do not all act in the same way. , | ||
| Epidemiology This is a common condition, but it is usually secondary to other diseases; again, alcohol is the most common cause, in the industrial world; however, among children and in the developing countries, malnutrition, especially protein and iron deficiencies, are the most common. | ||
| General Gross Description In severe and diffuse cases, the liver is enlarged, yellow, smooth, firmer than normal and greasy. In partial involvement, a pale or yellow blotchy appearance is often noted. Examples: | ||
| General Microscopic Description There are two forms of fatty change : microvesicular and macrovesicular. Microvesicular: Numerous tiny fat vesicles, requires fat stain to be appreciated. Often, one would be surprised as how enormous fat accumulation is without being seen in H&E sections. This is a toxic condition causing hepatocellular failure. Macrovesicular: a few large clear vacuoles in the cytoplasm of hepatocytes, pushing the nucleus aside. Usually, has no effect on the function of the hepatocyte. There is usually no inflammatory reaction to this, unless the fatty cells rupture. Examples: | ||
| References Cotran, Kumar and Robbins: Pathologic Basis of Disease, Cotran RS, Kumar V, Robbins SL: Robbins Pathologic Basis of Disease. 5th ed. Philadelphia, W.B. Saunders, 1994, pp. 857 This link will directly take you to the relevant new literature Fatty Metamorphosis
| Synopsis by: T.V.Rajan, M.D., Ph.D. (T56000M50080)[144]
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