Pathology is the bridge between basic science and clinical decision-making. Understanding the mechanisms of injury, inflammation, repair and neoplasia allows clinicians to interpret laboratory and histology results, generate appropriate differential diagnoses, and guide management. This overview focuses on high‑yield concepts and practical study strategies for students and early clinicians.

Microscope and histology slides on a lab bench

Essential mechanisms

Begin with the cellular response to injury. Reversible injury causes cell swelling and loss of function; irreversible injury leads to necrosis or apoptosis. The inflammatory response—innate and adaptive—determines tissue outcomes: resolution, chronic inflammation, or fibrosis. Learn the cardinal signs and cellular players for both acute and chronic inflammation.

Repair, healing and clinical relevance

Healing follows inflammation and proceeds by regeneration (if cells can proliferate) or by scar formation. Granulation tissue, angiogenesis and collagen deposition are central to repair. Clinical factors that delay healing include infection, ischemia, foreign bodies and metabolic disease such as diabetes.

Neoplasia—what to remember

Differentiate benign and malignant lesions by growth pattern, cytological atypia, invasion and metastatic potential. Understand grading (histologic appearance) and staging (extent of disease) because both inform prognosis and treatment. Recognise common paraneoplastic syndromes and the role of tumour markers as adjuncts, not definitive diagnostics.

High-yield organ examples

  • Liver: Fatty change → steatohepatitis → fibrosis and cirrhosis; surveillance focuses on hepatocellular carcinoma in high‑risk patients.
  • Lung: Different patterns of pneumonia, interstitial lung disease, and primary lung cancers with varying histology and management.
  • Kidney: Glomerular diseases present as nephritic or nephrotic syndromes; acute tubular necrosis is common in ischaemic or toxic injury.
  • Heart: Infarction pathology explains the timing of tissue changes after occlusion and underpins clinical care pathways for myocardial salvage.

Study strategies and resources

Integrate histology slides with clinical cases. Practice describing histological findings concisely: cell type, pattern, distribution and likely aetiology. Use atlases and review articles (for example, the NCBI Bookshelf) and test application using our Question Bank. Pair microscopy with gross pathology images to develop pattern recognition.

Clinical application

Pathology reports inform diagnosis, prognosis and treatment. When reviewing a report, focus on specimen adequacy, main histological diagnosis, margin status (for resections), and any ancillary tests (immunohistochemistry, molecular markers) that affect management. Discuss complex results with pathology colleagues when needed.

Combine mechanistic understanding with frequent practice: reading reports, examining slides, and working through clinical scenarios will build durable knowledge for exams and clinical practice.