Intracellular Accumulations - The Cellular Hoarders
- Four main pathways: Inadequate removal, excessive production, deposition of an abnormal exogenous substance, or inherited metabolic defects.
- Key Examples:
- Lipids: Steatosis (liver), cholesterol (atherosclerosis).
- Proteins: Mallory bodies (liver), Russell bodies (plasma cells).
- Pigments: Lipofuscin (wear-and-tear), hemosiderin (iron), carbon (anthracosis).
⭐ Hemosiderin is an iron-storage complex; its accumulation (hemosiderosis) is visualized with a Prussian blue stain, which turns the iron bright blue.
Lipid Accumulation - Greasy & Grimy
- Steatosis: Abnormal accumulation of triglycerides within parenchymal cells, most commonly the liver. Also seen in heart, muscle, and kidney.
- Causes: Alcoholism, obesity, diabetes mellitus, toxins (e.g., CCl₄), and protein malnutrition.
- Pathogenesis: Imbalance between fatty acid delivery/synthesis and their subsequent metabolism/export.
- Morphology:
- Gross: Enlarged, heavy, yellow, and greasy organ.
- Microscopy: Clear, sharply demarcated cytoplasmic vacuoles that displace the nucleus. Requires frozen sections with Oil Red O or Sudan Black B for positive staining.

⭐ In alcoholic fatty liver, the metabolism of ethanol by alcohol dehydrogenase and aldehyde dehydrogenase leads to a massive increase in the intracellular ratio of NADH to NAD+. This ↑ NADH/NAD+ ratio promotes lipid synthesis.
Protein Accumulation - Misfolded Mayhem
- Results from defects in protein folding, transport, or degradation, leading to toxic aggregates.
- Chaperones attempt refolding; the ubiquitin-proteasome system attempts degradation.
- Key Examples:
- Alpha-1-antitrypsin (AAT) deficiency: Misfolded AAT accumulates in liver ER.
- Mallory bodies: Damaged cytokeratin filaments in hepatocytes (alcoholic liver disease).
- Neurofibrillary tangles (NFTs): Hyperphosphorylated tau in Alzheimer's.
- Russell bodies: Immunoglobulin buildup in plasma cells.

⭐ AAT deficiency causes both loss-of-function (emphysema from low circulating AAT) and toxic gain-of-function (liver damage from protein aggregates).
Pigment Accumulation - Colorful Clues
- Lipofuscin: "Wear-and-tear" pigment.
- Yellow-brown granules from lipid peroxidation.
- Indicates past free radical injury; seen in aging heart, liver, and brain.
- Hemosiderin: Iron-storage complex.
- Golden-yellow-brown granules from hemoglobin breakdown.
- Identified by Prussian blue stain.
- Marks prior hemorrhage (bruise) or systemic iron overload (hemosiderosis).

⭐ Anthracosis (coal worker's pneumoconiosis) is the most common exogenous pigmentation, caused by inhaled carbon particles engulfed by alveolar macrophages, blackening lung tissue.
Pathologic Calcification - Rock-Solid Evidence
-
Dystrophic Calcification
- Occurs in damaged, necrotic tissues despite normal serum Ca²⁺ & phosphate levels.
- Seen in atherosclerosis, damaged heart valves, and areas of caseous necrosis.
- Pathogenesis involves initiation via damaged membranes and propagation of crystal formation.
-
Metastatic Calcification
- Results from hypercalcemia; deposits in otherwise normal tissue.
- Causes: ↑PTH, bone destruction, vitamin D-related disorders, renal failure.
- Affects tissues that lose acid, creating an alkaline environment (e.g., stomach, kidneys, lungs).

⭐ Psammoma bodies are distinctive, laminated calcific spherules seen in specific neoplasms. 📌 Papillary thyroid carcinoma, Serous cystadenocarcinoma of ovary, Meningioma, Mesothelioma.
High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- Steatosis (fatty change), most common in the liver, is often linked to alcohol abuse and is reversible.
- Atherosclerosis is characterized by foam cells, which are macrophages laden with cholesterol.
- Mallory bodies are damaged cytokeratin filaments in hepatocytes, classic for alcoholic hepatitis.
- Russell bodies are immunoglobulin inclusions found in plasma cells.
- Lipofuscin is the yellow-brown "wear-and-tear" pigment, a marker of free radical injury.
- Hemosiderin accumulation indicates iron overload (hemosiderosis).
- Anthracosis is the accumulation of carbon pigment in alveolar macrophages.
Continue reading on Oncourse
Sign up for free to access the full lesson, plus unlimited questions, flashcards, AI-powered notes, and more.
CONTINUE READING — FREEor get the app