Acute inflammatory diseases Flashcards

1
Q

Describe appendix anatomy

A
extension of LI
mesoappendix connects to ileum 
microscopically similar to colon 
young people have lining interspersed with lymphoid follicles 
mucosa, submucosa, muscularis, serosa
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2
Q

what are the causes of luminal obstruction in the appendix

A

foceal, gallstone, tumour, worms

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3
Q

describe the pathogenesis of appendicitis starting from luminal obstruction

A

-> mucus increases pressure -> mucosal ischaemia -> mucosal injury -> acute mucosal inflammation -> 2ndry bacterial invasion -> spread inflammation transmurally

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4
Q

what are the 3 stages of appendicitis

A

early acute,
acute suppurative
acute gangrenous

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5
Q

what happens in early acute appendicitis

A

neutrophilic exudate in mucosa

mild inflammation

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6
Q

what happens in acute suppurative appendicitis

A

transmural inflammation (tense, thick wall)
mucosal ulceration + purulent exudate in lumen (viscous cloudy fluid)
inflamed serosa and with fibrinopurulent exudate, microabscesss (pathcy, pale)
hyperaemia

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7
Q

what happens in acute gangrenous appendicitis

A

necrosis extends to muscularis externa because neutrophils -> enzymes + free radicals
rupture + acute peritonitis

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8
Q

clinical features of appendicitis

A

pain, low fever, nausea, vomiting, anorexia, neutrophilia
difficult to diagnose in old/young
many differentials

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9
Q

how does pain progress in appendicitis

A

starts as vague cramps progresses to be localised

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10
Q

complications with perforation in appendicitis

A

spread faeces into peritoneal cavity

local peri-appendical abscess or general peritonitis

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11
Q

complications with general peritonitis in appendicitis

A

ileus (temporary lack of the normal muscle contractions of the intestines)
cause temporary arrest of peristalsis and abdominal distention
incrrease fever, tenderness + rigidity

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12
Q

complications of septic shock in appendicitis

A

gram negative bacteria from GIT enter bloodstream
bacterial death releases lipopolysaccharides which cause endothelial injusry and cytokine release which causes widespread vasodilation
systemic septic shock -> myocardial injuriy + lowering BP

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13
Q

meninges anatomy

A

dura + arachnoid + pia mater

subarachnoid space circulates CSF therefore infection sprad rapidly

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14
Q

ROUTE OF cns INFECTION

A

haematogenous, direct traumatic implementation, local extension of infection or from pNS

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15
Q

damage from CNS infection caused by …

A

direct infectious injury, roxins, inflammatory response, immune mediates mechanisms

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16
Q

causes of APM

A
microorganisms 
neonates = e.coli + b streptococci
infants = strep pneumoniae
adolescents = neisseria meningitidis
elderly strep pneum. + lysteria monocytogenes
17
Q

symptoms apm

A

systemic infection, headache, photophobia, irritability, cloudy consciousness, bulging fontanelle, neck stiffness

18
Q

how is apm diagnosed

A

spinal tap = gluid has high nuetrophil count, high proteins and low glucose

19
Q

what are the complications of apm

A

cerebral oedema and increased ICP
infection spread to brain parenchyma causing focal cerebritis
exudate can ogranise causing adhesions to teh meninges and the CSK blockes = hydrocephalus
compress cranial nerve causing palsies
affect blood vessels causing thrombosis and infarctions
sepsis

20
Q

what is meningococcaemia

A

blood infection from meningitis
bacterial replicates releases endotoxins which interact with macrophages to release cytokines and free radicals
damage vascular endothelium and platelet deposition causes vasculitis and petechial haemorrhage
multiorgan shock

21
Q

describe the macroscopy of meningitis

A

brain swollen + leptomeninges are congested
purulent exudate over cerebral hemispheres + brain base
oedematous white matter
ventricular enlargement