Medicine can seem like an endless list of diseases to memorise. General pathology is the antidote: it teaches the small set of fundamental processes that underlie nearly all of them. Learn this recurring 'alphabet' of disease and any specific condition becomes a combination of patterns you already understand.
General vs. systemic pathology
General pathology studies the basic mechanisms of disease that apply everywhere; systemic pathology studies how those mechanisms play out in specific organs. General comes first because the same processes — injury, inflammation, repair — recur whether you're looking at the heart, the lung, or the liver.
The core processes
- Cell injury and death — how cells are damaged (by oxygen lack, toxins, infection) and the line between reversible injury and death (necrosis, apoptosis).
- Inflammation — the body's response to injury and infection; acute (rapid, neutrophil-driven) and chronic (prolonged, with tissue destruction and repair).
- Healing and repair — regeneration versus scarring, and why some tissues recover and others don't.
- Haemodynamic disorders — problems of blood flow: oedema, congestion, thrombosis, embolism, infarction.
- Neoplasia — the biology of abnormal growth: benign versus malignant, how cancers arise and spread.
You don't memorise a thousand diseases. You learn a dozen processes and how they combine — that's what pathology actually teaches.
Why it's the keystone subject
Pathology sits between basic science and clinical medicine. Understand cell injury and you understand why ischaemia damages tissue; understand inflammation and you understand fever, swelling, and a huge range of symptoms; understand neoplasia and oncology has a foundation. Nearly every clinical specialty rests on these processes.
From mechanism to patient
The payoff is clinical reasoning. A clinician who knows the mechanisms can predict how a disease will behave, why a treatment should work, and what complications to watch for — rather than recalling isolated facts. General pathology is where that reasoning is built.
Build the foundation
My General Pathology course works through cell injury, inflammation, healing, haemodynamic disorders, and neoplasia — the core processes that underlie all disease.
View the General Pathology course →Questions
What's the difference between general and systemic pathology?
General pathology covers the basic disease mechanisms that apply everywhere; systemic pathology covers how they manifest in specific organs. General is the foundation.
Who studies general pathology?
Medical, dental, nursing, and allied-health students, and clinicians wanting to reason from mechanism rather than memorise conditions.