mechanisms of disease by: mary beth vogel, bsn, rn-c

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Mechanisms of Disease By: Mary Beth Vogel, BSN, RN-C

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Page 1: Mechanisms of Disease By: Mary Beth Vogel, BSN, RN-C

Mechanisms of Disease

By: Mary Beth Vogel, BSN, RN-C

Page 2: Mechanisms of Disease By: Mary Beth Vogel, BSN, RN-C

Not So Useless Facts!

• 50 million in US have HTN; @ 50% don’t know it bc it’s asymptomatic

• Cardiovascular disease is the #1 killer in the US

• CVA is the #1 cause of adult disability

• MVA is the #1 cause of death for teens

• In 2009, 104 million MVA were caused by drivers using cell phones; 200,000 of these were caused by drivers texting

Page 3: Mechanisms of Disease By: Mary Beth Vogel, BSN, RN-C

Studying Disease

• Disease terminology• Health—physical, mental, and social well-

being—not merely the absence of disease

• Disease—an abnormality in body function that threatens health

• Etiology—the study of the factors that cause a disease

Page 4: Mechanisms of Disease By: Mary Beth Vogel, BSN, RN-C

Studying Disease

• Disease terminology• Idiopathic—refers to a disease with an

unknown cause

• Signs and symptoms—the objective and subjective abnormalities associated with a disease

• Pathogenesis—the pattern of a disease’s development

Page 5: Mechanisms of Disease By: Mary Beth Vogel, BSN, RN-C

Studying Disease

• Patterns of disease• Epidemiology is the study of occurrence,

distribution, and transmission of diseases in human populations

• Endemic diseases are native to a local region

• Epidemics occur when a disease affects many people at the same time

Page 6: Mechanisms of Disease By: Mary Beth Vogel, BSN, RN-C

Studying Disease

• Patterns of disease• Pandemics are widespread, perhaps global,

epidemics

• Discovering the cause of a disease is difficult because many factors affect disease transmission

• Disease can be fought through prevention and therapy (treatment)

Page 7: Mechanisms of Disease By: Mary Beth Vogel, BSN, RN-C

Pathophysiology

• Mechanisms of disease

• Pathophysiology—the study of underlying physiological aspects of disease

• 7 Categories of Mechanisms of Disease:1. Genetic mechanisms

2. Pathogenic organisms and particles

3. Tumors and cancer Neoplasms

Page 8: Mechanisms of Disease By: Mary Beth Vogel, BSN, RN-C

Pathophysiology

• Categories of Mechanisms of disease (Cont.)4. Traumatic mechanism - Physical and chemical agents

5. Metabolic mechanism

6. Inflammationa. Autoimmune b. Inflammation

7. Degeneration

Page 9: Mechanisms of Disease By: Mary Beth Vogel, BSN, RN-C

Categories of Disease Mechanisms

Page 10: Mechanisms of Disease By: Mary Beth Vogel, BSN, RN-C

1.Genetic Mutations

• Direct cause or an associated risk factor

• Ex: Hemophelia, Down syndrome, oncogene

Page 11: Mechanisms of Disease By: Mary Beth Vogel, BSN, RN-C

2. Infectious Mechanism

• Pathogenic organisms or particles

• Disease causing microorganisms

• Bacteria, fungus, virus, parasite, etc

Page 12: Mechanisms of Disease By: Mary Beth Vogel, BSN, RN-C

• Spread of Pathogens:

• Person to person

• Environmental

• Opportunistic invasion

• Transmission by vector

Page 13: Mechanisms of Disease By: Mary Beth Vogel, BSN, RN-C

3. Neoplastic Mechanism

• Cancers or neoplasms

• Abnormal cell growth/division

• Neoplasm

• Hyperplasia

• Anaplasia

Page 14: Mechanisms of Disease By: Mary Beth Vogel, BSN, RN-C

4. Traumatic Mechanism

• Physical or chemical causative factors

• Ex: lacerations, burn, contusion, fx, poisoning

Page 15: Mechanisms of Disease By: Mary Beth Vogel, BSN, RN-C

5. Metabolic Mechanisms

• Malnutrition

• Endocrine imbalance

• Ex: night blindness, ricketts, anemia, impaired post op wound healing, DM, hypothyroid

Page 16: Mechanisms of Disease By: Mary Beth Vogel, BSN, RN-C

6. Inflammatory Mechanisms

• A. Autoimmune

• B. Inflammation

• Ex: Lupus, asthma, crohn’s disease, RA

• Inappropriate or abnormally prolonged inflammation

Page 17: Mechanisms of Disease By: Mary Beth Vogel, BSN, RN-C

7. Degeneration

• Usually d/t aging

• Ex: DJD, osteoporosis,

Dementia

Page 18: Mechanisms of Disease By: Mary Beth Vogel, BSN, RN-C

Risk Factors

• Predisposing conditions

• Contribute to likelihood of dev illness

• May be minimized, controlled, eliminated

• Common risk factors and associated diseases?

Page 19: Mechanisms of Disease By: Mary Beth Vogel, BSN, RN-C

Risk Factors

• Genetics• Age• Lifestyle• Sleep• Stress• Environment• Preexisting

conditions• Abuse: substance,

physical, emotional

• Race• Gender• Socioeconomics• Medical hx• Nutrition• Travel• Trauma• Obesity• Immunocompromise

Page 20: Mechanisms of Disease By: Mary Beth Vogel, BSN, RN-C

Prevention/Control

• Prevent spread of pathogens/control transmission

• Manage risk factors

• Aseptic techniques: sterilization, disinfection, antisepsis, isolation

• Vaccination: attenuated/weakened or inactive/killed

• Antibiotics

• Antivirals

Page 21: Mechanisms of Disease By: Mary Beth Vogel, BSN, RN-C

Types of Pathogenic Organisms

1. Viruses

2. Prions

3. Bacteria

4. Fungi

5. Protozoa

6. Pathogenic Animals

Page 22: Mechanisms of Disease By: Mary Beth Vogel, BSN, RN-C

Cancer

• Neoplasm – “new matter” – aka “tumors”

• Malignant or benign

• Metastasis

• Can be distinct lump or diffusely spread

• Most common: skin, prostate

• Most # CA related deaths are d/t lung CA

• Least common: pancreatic

Page 23: Mechanisms of Disease By: Mary Beth Vogel, BSN, RN-C

• http://www.cancer.gov/cancertopics/types/commoncancers

• http://apps.nccd.cdc.gov/uscs/toptencancers.aspx

Page 24: Mechanisms of Disease By: Mary Beth Vogel, BSN, RN-C

1. Benign:

• Localized

• Encapsulated

• Grows slowly

• No metastasis

• Usually not life threatening

• Differentiated cells• A.Benign Epithelial Tumors:

Papilloma, Adenoma, Nevus

• B. Benign Conn Tiss Tumors:

Lipoma, Osteoma, Chondroma

Page 25: Mechanisms of Disease By: Mary Beth Vogel, BSN, RN-C

2. Malignant:

•Not encapsulated

•Can metastasize by blood or lymph

•Rapid growth

•Undifferentiated cells

•Life threatening

Page 26: Mechanisms of Disease By: Mary Beth Vogel, BSN, RN-C

• A. Malignant Epithelial Tumors (carcinomas):

Melanoma, Adenocarcinoma

• B. Malignant Conn Tiss Tumors (sarcomas):

Lymphoma, Osteosarcoma, Myeloma, Fibrosarcoma

Other Cancers:

• Neuroblastoma

• Cancers labeled acc to general organ location

Page 27: Mechanisms of Disease By: Mary Beth Vogel, BSN, RN-C

What causes CA?•Genetics•Env•Virus•Lifestyle •Aging cells

•Hyperplasia•Anaplasia

•Diagnosing CA:• Self exam•Imaging•Biopsy•Blood testing

Page 28: Mechanisms of Disease By: Mary Beth Vogel, BSN, RN-C

Major Forms of Cancer…

• Lung CA

• Colorectal CA

• Breast CA

• Prostate CA

• Uterine (including cervical) CA

• Urinary CA (bladder and kidney)

• Oral CA (lip, mouth, throat)

• Pancreatic CA

• Leukemia (cancer of blood tissue)

• Lymphoma (cancer of lymphoid tissue)

• Ovarian CA

• Skin CA

Page 29: Mechanisms of Disease By: Mary Beth Vogel, BSN, RN-C

CA Warning Signs:

•Unusual bleeding/bruising

•Sore that doesn’t heal

•Change in wart/mole

•Lump/thickening

•Cough/hoarseness

•Chronic indigestion

•Change in bowel/bladder habits

•Bone pain

•Extreme fatigue

•Unexplained wt loss

Page 30: Mechanisms of Disease By: Mary Beth Vogel, BSN, RN-C

• CA Prognosis:

• Staging: (I-IV) size/extent of spread

• Grading: (A-D) degree of cell abnormality

• Also extent of lymph node and other organs involved

Page 31: Mechanisms of Disease By: Mary Beth Vogel, BSN, RN-C

CA Imaging & Diagnosis

•Xray, CT, MRI, US, PET

•Biopsy & Blood tests

CA Tx:

•Surgery

•Radiation

•Chemotherapy

•Laser therapy

•Immunotherapy

CA Tx complications:

• Cachexia

•Death: tx complication or secondary infection

Page 32: Mechanisms of Disease By: Mary Beth Vogel, BSN, RN-C

Inflammation

Page 33: Mechanisms of Disease By: Mary Beth Vogel, BSN, RN-C

Inflammatory response

Protective response, combo of body processes with goal of minimizing tissue injury and maintaining homeostasis

Regeneration & replacement of tissues

Signs of Inflammation:

•Redness

•Swelling/Edema

•Heat

•Pain

Page 34: Mechanisms of Disease By: Mary Beth Vogel, BSN, RN-C

• Types of Inflammation:

• Acute

• Chronic

• Localized

• Systemic

Inflammatory response

Inflammation Mediators:

• Kinins, prostaglandins, histamines

• Cause a series of events…

Page 35: Mechanisms of Disease By: Mary Beth Vogel, BSN, RN-C

Irritant: Cell damage (intro of bac) causing the rel of inflamm med

Inc bld vess permeability ChemotaxisBld vess Dilation

Inc bld vol and WBCs to area

Inc WBCs, inc H2O to dilute and bld prot that encapsulate irritant

WBC attraction and phagocytosis

Redness

HeatEdema

Pain

Page 36: Mechanisms of Disease By: Mary Beth Vogel, BSN, RN-C

Irritant = cell damage/release of inflamm med; causes 3 events:

•1. Bld vessel dilation= redness/heat

•2. Increase Bld vessel permeability: = edema/pain

•3. Chemotaxis: WBC to site

•Inflammatory exudate =

Pus (tiss fl w/ WBCs,

pathogens, debris)

Page 37: Mechanisms of Disease By: Mary Beth Vogel, BSN, RN-C

Irritant: Cell damage (intro of bac) causing the rel of inflamm med. Names of these?

Redness

HeatEdema

Pain

Page 38: Mechanisms of Disease By: Mary Beth Vogel, BSN, RN-C

• Fever – purpose??

• Pyrexia/febrile

• Systemic inflammatory response

• Pediatrics/geriatrics: altered fever response

• Increased temp kills/inhibits pathogens

• TX: ASA, Acetominophen, Ibuprofen, etc.

Page 39: Mechanisms of Disease By: Mary Beth Vogel, BSN, RN-C

• Meds to tx inflamm:

• Acetaminophen

• Antihistamines

• NSAIDs

• Steroids

• Is acetominophen an NSAID?

• Inflammatory Diseases:

• RA, Allergies, Lupus, Crohns

• Eczema, Chronic bronchitis, Asthma

Page 40: Mechanisms of Disease By: Mary Beth Vogel, BSN, RN-C

Tissue Repair• Regeneration

• Replacement = scar

• Keloid – abnormal scarring beyond original inj site

• Adhesion - internal

Page 41: Mechanisms of Disease By: Mary Beth Vogel, BSN, RN-C

Review!

• The pt states they feel nauseous. Is this a sign or symptom?

• Name the 5 vital signs. Why are they signs?

• What is an ex of an acute illness?

• What is an ex of a chronic illness?

• What is an illness endemic to the northeast US?

• Name 2 current pandemics.

Page 42: Mechanisms of Disease By: Mary Beth Vogel, BSN, RN-C

Disease Terminology

• 1.Health

• 2. Pathology

• 3. Pathophysiology

• 4. Disease

• 5. Sign

• 6. Symptom

• 7. Syndrome

Page 43: Mechanisms of Disease By: Mary Beth Vogel, BSN, RN-C

• 8. Acute

• 9. Chronic

• 10. Etiology

• 11. Idiopathic

• 12. Pathogenesis

Page 44: Mechanisms of Disease By: Mary Beth Vogel, BSN, RN-C

• 13. Communicable/infectious

• 14. Epidemiology

• 15. Morbidity

• 16. Mortality

• 17. Remission

• 18. Incubation

• 19. Convalescence

Page 45: Mechanisms of Disease By: Mary Beth Vogel, BSN, RN-C

• 20. Endemic

• 21. Epidemic

• 22. Pandemic