Chronic inflammation Flashcards

- Describe the sequelae of acute inflammation - Name the important causes of chronic inflammation - Describe the macroscopic and microscopic appearances of chronic inflammation - Name the cells of chronic inflammation - Describe the role of macrophage and its derivatives in chronic inflammation

1
Q

Factors favouring resolution

A
  • Minimal cell death and tissue damage
  • Occurrence in an organ or tissue with regenerative capacity eg liver
  • Rapid destruction of the casual agent
  • Rapid removal of fluid and debris by good local vascular drainage
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2
Q

organisation

A

Replacement of destroyed tissue by granulation tissue

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3
Q

Factors favouring organisation

A
  • Large amounts of fibrin
  • Substantial necrosis
  • Exudate and debris cannot be removed or discharged
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4
Q

Signs of organisation

A

Signs of organisation

  • Sprouting capillaries – production of new capillaries
  • Proliferation of fibroblasts
  • Macrophage infiltration – inflammatory cell
  • New capillary beds
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5
Q

Organisation - granulation tissue

A

Orgnisation – granulation tissue

  • Much skin is completely destroyed and the underlying tissue is undergoing repair. The underlying tissue is undergoing repair, The damaged area is being replaced by vascular granulation tissue.
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6
Q

Inflammatory exudate replaced by

A

capillaries, macrophages,fibroblasts, collagen

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7
Q

what drives organisation ?

A

TNF, EGF,FGF - growth factors

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8
Q

Chronic inflammation

A
  • Primary – occur entirely without a previous episode
  • Progression from acute inflammation
  • Recurrent episodes of acute inflammation

Examples

  1. Resistance of infective agent to phagocytosis and intracellular eg TB, leprosy, viral infections
  2. Foreign body reactions to endogenous materials eg gout ( may be acute or chronic )
  3. Foreign body reactions to exogenous materials eg asbestos
  4. Some autoimmune diseases such as rheumatoid arthritis – primarily in the synovial of the joints
  5. Specific diseases of unkown aetiology eg ulcerative colitis
  6. Primary granulomatous diseases eg sarcoidosis
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9
Q

Factors favouring progression from acute to chronic

A
  1. Indigestible substances eg glass, suture material ( foreign body reaction )
  2. Deep seated suppurative inflammation where drainage is delayed or inadequate
    - Thick abcess walls
    - Formation of granulation/fibrous tissue
    - Pus becomes organised
    - Forms fibrous scar

Osteomyelitis – a chronic abcess which is extremely difficult to eradicate

  1. Recurrent episodes of acut inflammation and healing may eventually result in the clinicopathological entity of chronic inflammation

Chronic cholecystitis – replacement of wall by fibrous tissue lymphocytes rather than neutrophils predominate

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10
Q

What does chronic inflammation look like?

A

Chronic ulcer

  • Mucose breached
  • Base lined by granulation tissue
  • Fibrous tissue throughout muscle laeyers ( in peptic ulcer)

Chronic abscess cavity eg osteomyelitis, empyema thoracis

Thickening of the wall of a hollow viscus

Granulolmatous inflammation eg tuberculosis

Fibrosis

The cells of chronic inflammation

  • On inflammatory process in which lymphocytes plasma cells and macrophages predominate
  • Usually accompanied by the formation of granulation tissue resulting in fibrosis
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11
Q

Macrophages

A
  • Considerate phagocytic capabilities
  • Can ingest a wide range of materials
  • Relatively large cells
  • Can harbour viable organisms resistant to lyosomal enzymes eg mycobacterium tuberculosis, mycobacterium leprae
  • Produce a range of important cytokines
  • Activated on migration to an area of inflammation
  • Macrophage activation factor ( MAF )
  • Migration inhibition factor ( MIF )
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12
Q

Sarcoidosis in liver – granuloma of epitheloid histiocyte

A
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13
Q

Granulomatous inflammation

A
  • A granuloma is an aggregate of epitheloid macrophages
  • A histriocyte is a a macrophage in connective tissue
  • Little phagocytic activity
  • Secretory function
  • Typical granuloma
    • central giant cells +/- caesation
  • Surrounded by epitheliod histiocytes
  • Peripheral rim of actvivated lymphocytes
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14
Q

Causes of granulomatous disease

A
  • Specific infections
  • Foreign bodies – endogenous and exogenous
  • Specific chemicals
  • Drugs
  • Unkown
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15
Q

Granulation inflamamtion

A

May develop – necrotic tissue, giant cells

Mau causative agents are2 ingestible – foreign bodies, specific infections

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16
Q

Terms to know relating to inflammation

A

Granuloma - aggregate of macrophage like cells

Granulation - important healing process with small blood vessels and connective tissues

Fibrin - deposited in acute inflammation

fibrous - typical scar tissue with collagen

Acute vs chronic - distinguished by dynamics and character of process, ie time of onset , resolution and cells involved.

Exudate vs transudate - high protein content from inc vasc perm vs low protein content from normal vasc perm