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B1 Intermediate English 9:48 Educational

Cirrhosis - causes, symptoms, diagnosis, treatment, pathology

Osmosis from Elsevier · 1,862,342 views · Added 1 month ago

Learning Stats

B1

CEFR Level

5/10

Difficulty

Subtitles (118 segments)

00:05

When cells are injured or damaged and die off, usually that dead tissue that was previously

00:10

full of living cells becomes fibrotic, meaning it becomes thickened with heaps and heaps

00:15

of protein and forms scar tissue.

00:19

So when your liver is constantly forced to process alcohol like in alcoholic liver disease,

00:24

or subject to a viral attack for a long time like in HBV, or anything else that causes

00:29

a long-term or chronic state of liver cell or hepatocyte destruction and inflammation,

00:35

your liver can become seriously scarred and damaged to the point where it’s no longer

00:40

reversible, at which point it becomes fibrotic and in the liver we call this process cirrhosis.

00:49

Because it’s usually irreversible, cirrhosis is often referred to as “end-stage” or

00:55

“late-stage” liver damage.

00:57

When liver cells are injured, they start to come together and form what are called regenerative

01:01

nodules.

01:03

You can think of these as colonies of living liver cells.

01:07

These are one of the classic signs of cirrhosis and are why a cirrhotic liver is more bumpy

01:12

as opposed to a smooth, healthy liver.

01:15

Also with cirrhotic liver tissue, you’ll see that in between these clumps of cells

01:19

or nodules, is fibrotic tissue and collagen.

01:23

Here’s a classic histology image of cirrhotic tissue, this clump of cells in the middle

01:27

is the regenerative nodule, and these blue stains surrounding it are the bands of protein

01:32

from the process of fibrosis.

01:35

If we zoom out a bit and look at it with the naked eye, we’ll again see these nodules,

01:39

which have fibrotic protein bands in between.

01:42

How do these bands of fibrotic tissue form though?

01:47

Well fibrosis is a process mediated by special cells called stellate cells, that sit between

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