The video owner has disabled playback on external websites.
This video is no longer available on YouTube.
This video cannot be played right now.
Watch on YouTube
Unlock AI-Powered Learning Tools
Sign up to access powerful tools that help you learn faster from every video.
Cirrhosis - causes, symptoms, diagnosis, treatment, pathology
Learning Stats
CEFR Level
Difficulty
Subtitles (118 segments)
When cells are injured or damaged and die off, usually that dead tissue that was previously
full of living cells becomes fibrotic, meaning it becomes thickened with heaps and heaps
of protein and forms scar tissue.
So when your liver is constantly forced to process alcohol like in alcoholic liver disease,
or subject to a viral attack for a long time like in HBV, or anything else that causes
a long-term or chronic state of liver cell or hepatocyte destruction and inflammation,
your liver can become seriously scarred and damaged to the point where it’s no longer
reversible, at which point it becomes fibrotic and in the liver we call this process cirrhosis.
Because it’s usually irreversible, cirrhosis is often referred to as “end-stage” or
“late-stage” liver damage.
When liver cells are injured, they start to come together and form what are called regenerative
nodules.
You can think of these as colonies of living liver cells.
These are one of the classic signs of cirrhosis and are why a cirrhotic liver is more bumpy
as opposed to a smooth, healthy liver.
Also with cirrhotic liver tissue, you’ll see that in between these clumps of cells
or nodules, is fibrotic tissue and collagen.
Here’s a classic histology image of cirrhotic tissue, this clump of cells in the middle
is the regenerative nodule, and these blue stains surrounding it are the bands of protein
from the process of fibrosis.
If we zoom out a bit and look at it with the naked eye, we’ll again see these nodules,
which have fibrotic protein bands in between.
How do these bands of fibrotic tissue form though?
Well fibrosis is a process mediated by special cells called stellate cells, that sit between
Full subtitles available in the video player
Practice with Exercises
Generate vocabulary, grammar, and comprehension exercises from this video
Comments (0)
Login to CommentSign up to unlock full features
Track progress, save vocabulary, and practice exercises
Interactive Mode
Quiz
Correct answer:
Related Videos
The Kid Is Not My Son! - Trevor Noah - Any Questions from Washington, DC!
La La Land - Clip "City of Stars" - In Cinemas Now
When Jack Let Her Fly | TITANIC (1997) Movie CLIP 4K
Gordon Ramsay’s Hideous Lunch | Kitchen Nightmares
How My School Teachers Influenced Me - Smarter Every Day 284
Osmosis from Elsevier
Quiz
Correct answer:
Quizzes appear as you watch the video
Memory Tip
From this video
Start learning languages for free