Chapter 3: Chronic Inflammation Flashcards

1
Q

What is all occurring during chronic inflammation?

A

inflammation, tissue injury, and attempts at repair coexist in varying combinations

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2
Q

what are 3 different settings that chronic inflammation arises?

A

1) persistent infection by organisms that are difficult to eradicate 2) hypersensitivity diseases 3) prolonged exposure to potentially toxic agents (exogenous or endogenous) such as silica

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3
Q

what is an example of a difficult organism to eradicate?

A

mycobacteria and parasitic infection where it can be associated with a granulomatous reaction

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4
Q

what are three examples of hypersensitivity diseases?

A

1) immune reaction against self (multiple sclerosis) 2) unregulated immune responses against microbes (IBD) 3) immune responses against common environmental substances (asthma)

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5
Q

what is the onset like of chronic inflammation?

A

slow: days

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6
Q

what is the cellular infiltrate of chronic inflammation?

A

monocytes/macrophages and lymphocytes

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7
Q

what is the cellular infiltrate of acute inflammation?

A

mainly neutrophils

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8
Q

what is the tissue injury/ fibrosis like of chronic inflammation?

A

often severe and progressive

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9
Q

are the local and systemic signs prominent or less in chronic inflammation?

A

less

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10
Q

what are the dominant cells in most chronic inflammatory reactions? and how do they contribute to the reaction?

A

macrophages- which contribute to the reaction by secreting cytokines and growth factors that act on various cells, destroying foreign invaders and tissues, and activating other cells, notably T lymphocytes

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11
Q

What exactly are macrophages?

A

tissue cells derived from hematopoietic stem cells in the bone marrow in postnatal life

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12
Q

what are macrophages circulating in the blood called?

A

monocytes

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13
Q

what are liver macrophages called?

A

kupffer cells

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14
Q

what are spleen/lymph node macrophages called?

A

sinus histiocytes

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15
Q

what are macrophages in the CNS called?

A

microglial cells

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16
Q

what are macrophages in the lungs called?

A

alveolar macrophages

17
Q

what are macrophages in the skin called?

A

langerhans cells

18
Q

what is the half life of a blood monocyte?

A

about one day

19
Q

what is the lifespan of tissue macrophages?

A

may be several months or years

20
Q

Macrophages secrete mediators of inflammation such as cytokines. What are some of these cytokines? What else do macrophages secrete

A

TNF, IL-1, chemokines; eicosanoids

21
Q

where do macrophages display the antigen to?

A

to T lymphocytes

22
Q

what causes classically activated macrophages?

A

IFN-gamma (microbial products)

23
Q

what do classically activated macrophages secrete to cause microbicidal actions of phagocytosis and killing of many bacteria and fungi?

A

ROS, NO, lysosomal enzymes

24
Q

what do classically activated macrophages secrete to cause inflammation?

A

IL-1, IL-12, and IL-23

25
Q

what causes alternatively activated macrophages?

A

IL-13 and IL-4

26
Q

what do alternatively activated macrophages secrete to cause tissue repair and fibrosis?

A

growth factors and TGF-beta

27
Q

what do alternatively activated macrophages secrete to causes anti-inflammatory effects?

A

IL-10 and TGF-beta

28
Q

what amplifies and propagates chronic inflammation?

A

when microbes and other environmental antigens activate T and B lymphocytes

29
Q

what happens when T and B lymphocytes are involved in the inflammatory reaction?

A

the inflammation tends to be persistent and severe, in part because lymphocyte activation leads to the generation of long-lived memory cells

30
Q

In some chronic inflammatory reactions, the accumulated lymphocytes, antigen presenting cells, and plasma cells cluster together to form what?

A

lymphoid tissues resembling lymph nodes. These are called tertiary lymphoid organs or lymphoid aggregates

31
Q

when might eosinophils be abundant?

A

in immune reactions mediated by IgE and in parasitic infections (think eosinophil in the setting of hypersensitivity, allergy, and parasitic infection)

32
Q

what recruits eosinophils?

A

specific chemokines- eotaxin and IL-5

33
Q

what do the granules of eosinophils contain?

A

major basic protein, a highly cationic protein that is toxic to parasites but also causes lysis of mammalian epithelial cells

34
Q

what could be used to treat severe asthma?

A

a unique IL-5 inhibitor: Benralizumab

35
Q

what is granulomatous inflammation?

A

a form of chronic inflammation characterized by collections of activated macrophages, often with T lymphocytes and sometimes associated with central necrosis

36
Q

what is one example of a disease with granulomatous inflammation; what is the cause of this disease; and what is the tissue reaction?

A

Tuberculosis; mycobacterium tuberculosis; caseating granuloma

37
Q

what should always be excluded as the cause when granulomas are identified?

A

tuberculosis