Fibrosis
Fibrosis | |
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Micrograph of a heart showing fibrosis (yellow - left of image) and amyloid deposition (brown - right of image). Movat's stain.
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Classification and external resources | |
Specialty | Pathology |
Patient UK | Fibrosis |
MeSH | D005355 |
Fibrosis is the formation of excess fibrous connective tissue in an organ or tissue in a reparative or reactive process.[1] This can be a reactive, benign, or pathological state. In response to injury, this is called scarring, and if fibrosis arises from a single cell line, this is called a fibroma. Physiologically, fibrosis acts to deposit connective tissue, which can obliterate the architecture and function of the underlying organ or tissue. Fibrosis can be used to describe the pathological state of excess deposition of fibrous tissue, as well as the process of connective tissue deposition in healing.[2]
Physiology
Fibrosis is similar to the process of scarring, in that both involve stimulated cells laying down connective tissue, including collagen and glycosaminoglycans. Immune cells called macrophages, as well as any damaged tissue between surfaces called interstitium, release TGF beta. There are numerous reasons for this, including inflammation of the nearby tissue, or a generalised inflammatory state, with increased circulating mediators. TGF beta stimulates the proliferation and activation of fibroblasts, which deposit connective tissue.[3]
Examples of fibrosis
Fibrosis can occur in many tissues within the body, typically as a result of inflammation or damage, and examples include:
Lungs
- Pulmonary fibrosis
- Cystic fibrosis
- Idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (idiopathic meaning the cause is unknown)
Liver
Heart
Brain
Other
- Arthrofibrosis (knee, shoulder, other joints)
- Crohn's Disease (intestine)
- Dupuytren's contracture (hands,fingers)
- Keloid (skin)
- Mediastinal fibrosis (soft tissue of the mediastinum)
- Myelofibrosis (bone marrow)
- Peyronie's disease (penis)
- Nephrogenic systemic fibrosis (skin)
- Progressive massive fibrosis (lungs); a complication of coal workers' pneumoconiosis
- Retroperitoneal fibrosis (soft tissue of the retroperitoneum)
- Scleroderma/systemic sclerosis (skin, lungs)
- Some forms of adhesive capsulitis (shoulder)
References
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- ↑ Glossary of dermatopathological terms. DermNet NZ
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
External links
- International Scar Meeting in Tokyo 2010 International Scar Meeting[dead link]