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Pathology is the scientific study of disease . Pathology comprises scientific knowledge and diagnostic methods essential, first, for understanding diseases and their causes and, second, for their effective prevention and treatment. Pathology embraces the functional and structural changes in disease, from the molecular level to the effects on the individual patient, and is continually developing as new research illuminates our knowledge of disease.
The ultimate goal of pathology is the identification of the causes and mechanisms of disease leading to successful therapy and disease prevention. Without pathology, the practice of medicine would still rely on myths and folklore, and consequently be ineffective.
Evolving concepts about the causes and nature of human disease reflect prevailing explanations for all worldly events and also the techniques available for their investigation ( Table 1.1 ). Thus the early dominance of animism, for example in the philosophies of Plato (424–348 bc ) and Pythagoras ( c . 580– c . 500 bc ), led to the belief that disease represented the adverse effects of immaterial or supernatural forces, often as punishment for wrongdoing. Treatments were often brutal and ineffective.
Hypothetical cause of disease | Techniques supporting causal hypothesis | Period |
---|---|---|
Animism | None | Primitive, although the ideas persist in some cultures |
Magic | None | Primitive, although the ideas persist in some cultures |
Humours (excess or deficiency) | Early autopsies and clinical observations | c . 500 bc to c . ad 1500 |
Spontaneous generation (abiogenesis) | Analogies with decomposing matter | Before ad 1800 |
Environmental |
|
1850 to present |
Genetic | Molecular pathology (e.g. DNA analysis) and clinical observations on inherited defects | 20th century to present |
When many symptoms, signs and postmortem findings were first believed to have natural explanations, the underlying disease was postulated to be due to an imbalance (‘isonomia’) of the four humours — phlegm, black bile, yellow bile and blood — as proposed by Empedocles (490–430 bc ) and Hippocrates ( c . 460–370 bc ). These concepts are now obsolete.
Galen (129– c . 200) built on Hippocrates' naturalistic ideas about disease by giving them an anatomic and physiological basis. However, it was probably Ibn Sina (980–1037) — commonly known as Avicenna — who, by his Canon of Medicine , pioneered advances in medicine through scientific discovery by observation, experimentation and clinical trials.
Some of the greatest advances in our understanding of disease emerged from internal examination of the body after death. Autopsies (necropsies or postmortem examinations) have been performed since about 300 bc and have helped to clarify the nature of many diseases. As these examinations were confined initially to the gross (rather than microscopic) examination of the organs, this period is regarded as the era of morbid anatomy . A notable landmark was the publication in 1761 of De Sedibus et Causis Morborum per Anatomem Indagatis by Giovanni Morgagni (1682–1771). During the 18th and 19th centuries in Europe, medical science was further advanced by Matthew Baillie (1761–1823), Carl von Rokitansky (1804–1878) and Ludwig Aschoff (1866–1942). They meticulously performed and documented many thousands of autopsies and, crucially, correlated their findings with the clinical signs and symptoms of the patients and with the natural history of numerous diseases.
Pathology, and indeed medicine as a whole, was revolutionised by the application of microscopy to the study of diseased tissues from about 1800. Previously, it was commonly believed that tissue alterations in disease resulted from a process of spontaneous generation ; that is, by metamorphosis independent of any external cause or other influence. Today, this notion seems ridiculous, but 200 years ago nothing was known of bacteria, viruses, ionising radiation, carcinogenic chemicals, and so on. Louis Pasteur's (1822–1895) demonstration that microorganisms in the environment could contaminate and impair the quality of wine was a major advance in our perception of the environment and our knowledge that pathogens within it, invisible to the naked eye, cause disease.
Rudolf Virchow (1821–1902), a German physician and pathologist and an ardent advocate of the microscope, recognised that cells were the smallest viable constituent units of the body. Building on the work of Theodor Schwann (1810–1882) he formulated a new and lasting set of ideas about disease — cellular pathology . The light microscope enabled diseased tissues to be viewed at a cellular level. His observations, extended further by electron microscopy, have had a profound and enduring influence. But Virchow's cell pathology theory is neither complete nor immutable; advances in biochemistry have revolutionised our understanding of many diseases at a molecular level.
The impact of molecular pathology is exemplified by advances in our knowledge of the biochemical basis of congenital disorders and cancer. Techniques with relatively simple principles (less easy in practice) reveal the change of a single nucleotide in genomic DNA resulting in the synthesis of the defective gene product that is the fundamental lesion in a particular disease ( Ch. 3 ).
Modern scientific methods have resulted in a clearer understanding of the ways in which diseases result from disturbed normal cellular and molecular mechanisms ( Table 1.2 ).
Component | Normal function | Examples of alterations in disease |
---|---|---|
Cellular | ||
Nucleus | Genes encoded in DNA | Inherited or spontaneous mutations (e.g. inherited, metabolic disorders, cancer) Site of viral replication |
Mitochondria | Oxidative metabolism | Mutations of mitochondrial DNA Enzyme defects |
Lysosomes | Enzymic degradation | Functional defects cause metabolic storage disorders and defects in microbial killing |
Cell membrane | Functional envelope of cell | Defects in ion transfer (e.g. cystic fibrosis, hereditary spherocytosis) |
Adhesion molecules | Cellular adhesion | Increased expression in inflammation Decreased expression in neoplasia |
HLA molecules | Immune recognition | Aberrant expression associated with autoimmune disease Some HLA alleles correlate with risk of disease |
Receptors | Specific recognition | Hormone receptors cause cells to respond to physiological or pathological hormone levels Lymphocyte receptors enable immune responses to antigens |
Secreted products | ||
Collagen | Mechanical strength of tissues | Replacement of functioning parenchyma by fibrosis Inherited defects (e.g. osteogenesis imperfecta) |
Immunoglobulins | Antibody activity in immune reactions | Deficiency leads to increased infection risk Secreted by myeloma cells Specific antibody activity may be in response to infection or a marker of autoimmune disease |
Nitric oxide | Endothelium-derived relaxing factor causing vasodilatation, inhibition of platelet aggregation and of proliferation | Increased levels in endotoxic shock and in asthma |
Hormones | Control of specific target cells | Excess or deficiency due to disease of endocrine organs |
Cytokines | Regulation of inflammatory and immune responses and of cell proliferation | Increased levels in inflammatory, immunological and reparative tissue reactions |
Free radicals | Microbial killing | Inappropriate or excessive production causes tissue damage |
Scientific knowledge about human diseases is derived from observations on patients or, by analogy, from experimental studies on animals, cell cultures and computer simulations. The greatest contribution comes from the detailed study of tissue and body fluids from patients. Pathology also has a key role in translational research by facilitating the transfer of knowledge derived from laboratory investigations into clinical practice.
Clinical medicine involves a longitudinal approach to a patient's illness — the patient's history, the examination and investigation, the diagnosis, the treatment and follow-up. Clinical pathology is more concerned with a cross-sectional analysis at the level of the disease itself, studied in depth — the cause and mechanisms of the disease, and the effects of the disease upon the various organs and systems of the body. These two perspectives are complementary and inseparable: clinical medicine cannot be practised effectively without understanding pathology; pathology is meaningless if it lacks clinical significance.
Approximately 70% of clinical diagnoses rely on pathology investigations. In the USA, c . 90% of the objective data in electronic patient records are derived from pathology laboratories.
Pathology in clinical practice includes:
histopathology : the investigation and diagnosis of disease from the examination of tissues
cytopathology : the investigation and diagnosis of disease from the examination of isolated cells
haematology : the study of disorders of the cellular and coagulable components of blood
microbiology : the study of infectious diseases and the organisms responsible for them
immunology : the study of the specific defence mechanisms of the body
chemical pathology : the study and diagnosis of disease from the chemical changes in tissues and fluids
genetics : the study of abnormal chromosomes and genes
toxicology : the study of the effects of known or suspected poisons
forensic pathology : the use of pathology for legal purposes (e.g. investigation of death in suspicious circumstances).
These subdivisions are more important professionally (because each requires its own team of trained specialists) than educationally at the undergraduate level. Pathology must be taught and learnt in an integrated manner, for the body and diseases make no distinction between these professional subdivisions. This book, therefore adopts a multidisciplinary approach to pathology. In the systematic section (Part 3), the normal structure and function of each organ is summarised, the pathological basis for clinical signs and symptoms is described, and the clinical implications of each disease are emphasised.
Our growing knowledge of the causes and mechanisms of disease has emerged from advances in science and technology.
Before microscopy was applied to medical problems ( c . 1800), observations were limited to those made with the naked eye, and thus was accumulated much of our knowledge of the morbid anatomy of disease. Gross or macroscopic pathology is the modern nomenclature for this approach to the study of disease and, especially in the autopsy, is still important. The gross pathology of some diseases is so characteristic that, when interpreted by an experienced pathologist, a fairly confident diagnosis can be given before further investigation by, for example, light microscopy.
Advances in optics have yielded much new information about the structure of tissues and cells in health and disease. Before solid tissues are examined by light microscopy, the sample must first be thinly sectioned to permit the transmission of light and to minimise the superimposition of tissue components. These sections are usually cut from tissue hardened by embedding in wax or, less often, transparent plastic. For urgent or intraoperative diagnosis, sections are cut from tissue hardened by rapid freezing. Tissue sections are stained to help distinguish between different components (e.g. nuclei, cytoplasm, collagen).
The microscope can also be used to examine cells from cysts, body cavities, sucked from solid lesions or scraped from body surfaces. This is cytology and it is used widely in, for example, cancer screening.
Histochemistry is the study of the chemistry of tissues, usually by microscopy of tissue sections after they have been treated with specific reagents so that the biochemical features of individual cells can be visualised.
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