For any pathology question, first decide: Is it cell adaptation? Inflammation? Hemodynamic? Neoplastic? Then apply the simple rule. You will be right 80% of the time.
| | Simple Definition | Example | | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Edema | Too much fluid in tissues (interstitial space) | Heart failure → pedal edema; liver failure → ascites | | Hyperemia | Active increased blood flow (arteriolar dilation) | Blushing, inflamed tissue (red, warm) | | Congestion | Passive backup of blood (venous outflow blocked) | Chronic liver congestion → “nutmeg liver” | | Thrombosis | A blood clot forms inside a vessel (on abnormal endothelium) | Atherosclerotic plaque rupture → platelet plug + fibrin | | Embolism | A clot (or other junk) travels | DVT breaks off → pulmonary embolism (sudden death) | | Infarction | Tissue death from blocked artery | White infarct (solid organs like kidney), Red infarct (lung, bowel) | | Shock | Systemic hypoperfusion → cell death | Cardiogenic, hypovolemic, septic (distributive) |
| | Mnemonic | Meaning | | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Necrosis types | Liquefactive (brain), Caseous (TB), Coagulative (heart/kidney), Fat (pancreas), Fibrinoid (vessels) | Lucky Cats Catch Fat Fish | | Granuloma causes | Tissue, Fungus, TB, Leprosy, Syphilis, Cat scratch, Crohn’s | The Five T’s: TB, T. pallidum, Toxoplasma, Trauma, Tularemia (plus Fungus, FB) | | Nephritic vs. Nephrotic | Nephritic: “RBC casts, HTN, little protein” | Nephrotic: “Massive protein, foam cells, lots of edema” | | Tumor markers | PSA (Prostate), CA-125 (Ovary), CEA (Colon), AFP (Liver/Testis), HCG (Placenta/Testis) | Papa, COAL, and HCG |
Pathology is often perceived as an overwhelming labyrinth of complex terminology and microscopic distinctions. This paper dismantles that barrier by presenting core pathologic concepts through analogy, high-yield pattern recognition, and a "big picture" framework. It covers cellular adaptations, inflammation, hemodynamic disorders, and neoplasia, followed by a rapid, system-by-system synthesis. The goal is not to replace detailed texts but to provide a durable mental scaffold for clinicians and students. Section 1: The Golden Rule of Pathology The diagnosis is written in the tissue, but the story is written in the cells.
“Pathology is not difficult; it is simply detailed. Understand the why, and the what will follow.”
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