Week 11 Flashcards

1
Q

describe metabolic regulation of brain blood flow. hint: does metabolic regulation occur in the entire brain at once??

A

The most active brain regions receive increased blood flow and are hyperemic (blood flow exceeds aerobic requirements). Metabolic activity, especially the production of K+, adenosine, and nitric oxide, stimulate vasodilation. Astrocytes also play a role in secreting vasodilator chemicals (prostaglandin E2 and carbon monoxide) when stimulated by glutamate. Astrocytes may also stimulate release off vasodilators like NO.
Neurons, astrocytes, and arterioles all work together and this is termed Neurovascular Coupling and causes functional hyperemia (increased blood flow in response to activity)

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2
Q

Explain how frostbite occurs, why is skin susceptible to temperature damage?

A

skin maintains constant deep-body temperature through thermoregulation by adjusting blood flow though constriction and dilation of arterioles and Arteriovenous Anastomoses (direct hunts from arterioles to venules). When temperature is low, cutaneous vasoconstriction occurs so that less heat will be lost from the body. Skin appears rosy because blood is diverted to superficial capillary loops, but total cutaneous blood flow and rate of heat loss is lower. In extreme cold, blood flow is so severely restricted that tissue dies, this is frostbite (frozen water also punctures cell membranes and kills them).

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3
Q

What happens to cutaneous blood flow when temperature is warm or person is exercising? How does hot/humid environment or restrictive clothing effect this process? Emotions?

A

Decreased adrenergic sympathetic effects allow cutaneous arterioles to dilate. With more heat, increased sympathetic cholinergic axons cause vasodilation. They also stimulate sweat glands to lose heat by evaporation and release Bradykinin (vasodilator). Exercise (and fight or flight) cause vasodilation in cutaneous vessels and vasodilation in muscles, lowering peripheral resistance. However, arterial pressure is still high because of increased cardiac output. In hot/humid weather and restrictive clothing, vasodilation can persist after exercise and the blood pressure falls causing loss of consciousness and death. Emotional states can also effect sympathetic activity and cause “cold sweat” or blushing

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4
Q

*What are the most important variables affecting blood pressure. What controls these variables

A
  1. cardiac rate
  2. stroke volume (determined by blood volume)
  3. total peripheral resistance
    Kidneys control blood volume and thus stroke volume while sympathoadrenal system controls total peripheral resistance and cardiac rate
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5
Q

*How is blood pressure sensed and then maintained within normal limits on a beat-to-beat basis? describe the pathway from sense to integration to effector

A

Baroreceptor Reflex:
Baroreceptors (stretch receptors) located in the Aortic Arch and Carotid Sinuses sense increased/decreased blood pressure and stimulus ascends via the Vagus (X) and Glossopharyngeal (IX) nerves to the medulla oblongata. Here the vasomotor control center regulates the degree of vasoconstriction and vasodilation to regulate peripheral resistance. The cardiac control center regulates cardiac rate. Both of these centers in the medulla act through parasympathetic and sympathetic axons to the heart and blood vessels to cause their effects. Blood pressure is MAINLY regulated by total peripheral resistance and secondly by cardiac output.

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6
Q

describe what happens when a person goes from lying to standing position quickly

A

Blood pools in the lower extremities and reduces venous return and cardiac output, but the fall in blood pressure is almost immediately compensated for by the baroreceptor reflex. Decreased baroreceptor sensory stimulation along vagus and glossopharyngeal nerves to medulla results in inhibited parasympathetic activity and increased sympathetic activity, increasing cardiac rate and vasoconstriction to maintain blood pressure upon standing.

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7
Q

How can you manually stimulate the baroreceptor reflex to lower blood pressure?

A

Massaging the carotid sinus stimulates the baroreceptors to lower blood pressure. Slowing of cardiac rate can lead to loss of consciousness or even cardiac arrest. Martial artists also use the carotid sinus as a target to cause unconsciousness.

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8
Q

How did Elvis die

A

Elvis was on barbiturates which causes constipation and reduced heart rate. His colon was enlarged, as was his heart. He died on the toilet while performing Valsalva’s maneuver (bearing down as if attempting forceful exhalation while preventing air from escaping the mouth/nose) which increases thoracic pressure and stimulation of parasympathetic nervous system (slows heart rate). The combined effect of suppressive drugs, constipation, enlarged heart, and Valsalva’s maneuver lead to decreased heart rate and a cardiac arrhythmia causing death.

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9
Q

How was blood pressure first measured? how is it measured now?

A

Stephen Hales inserted a cannula into a horse artery and measure the heights which blood would rise (systolic) and fall (diastolic). Now we use Korotkoff’s indirect, auscultatory method. A sphygmomanometer cuff with inflatable bladder is wrapped around upper arm while a stethoscope is applied over the brachial artery. The cuff is inflated and arteries are silenced (closed off). As pressure lowers, a First Korotkoff Sound (tapping) is heard when cuff pressure = systolic pressure and turbulent flow occurs. Pressure keeps dropping until cuff pressure = diastolic pressure and the Last Korotkoff Sound is heard, silence (or just muffled sounds) occurs now because laminar flow is occurring instead of turbulent flow.

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10
Q

What is average blood pressure in the pulmonary arteries, how does this compare to systemic circulation? What causes the pulmonary pressure to be different?

A

Systemic pressure is 120/80 while pulmonary is 22/8, way lower! However, cardiac output from the right ventricles must be equal to that of the left ventricle. So since cardiac output is the same, it is the lowered peripheral resistance that causes lowered pulmonary pressure. Since the right ventricle has a lower resistance, it has a lighter workload and its walls are thinner

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11
Q

What is felt when you take a pulse? What is pulse pressure? How is mean arterial pressure different?

A

When you palpate an artery (radial artery) you feel expansion of the artery in response to beating of the heart, so pulse is a measure of cardiac rate. Expansion occurs as a result of a rise in blood pressure after ventricle ejects blood. Because pulse is produced by a rise in pressure from diastolic to systolic levels, the difference between these two pressures is called Pulse Pressure. This is a reflection of stroke volume. Mean arterial pressure represents average arterial pressure during the cardiac cycle

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12
Q

What is hypertension and what causes it? two types

A

Hypertension = blood pressure in excess of the normal range (130/80 or higher). Secondary hypertension is a result of some other disease like renal failure or adrenal tumor or arteriosclerosis of renal arteries, increasing blood volume and secreting vasoactive chemicals from the kidney. Primary/Essential Hypertension is the result of complex and poorly understood processes. High salt diet induces hypertension (increase osmolality, ADH secretion, increase water reabsorption and blood volume). Kidney’s ability to excrete Na+ declines with age. High aldosterone may also stimulate salt and water reabsorption.

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13
Q

What mechanisms occur during essential hypertension that may act to raise blood pressure? What is the final common pathway in causing hypertension?

A

Baroreceptor reflex is chronically active to try to lower blood pressure, but sometimes sympathoadrenal activation increases and causes vasoconstriction which raises blood pressure. Artery epithelium also secretes endothelin (which is a vasoconstrictor) and decreases nitric oxide secretion (a vasodilator). There are lots of confusing factors in hypertension, A study in obese rats showed that leptin may increase sympathetic activation and increase blood pressure.
Whatever the cause, the kidneys should be able to compensate by lowering blood volume, so kidney function is the final common pathway in essential hypertension

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14
Q

What are treatments for hypertension and how do they work?

A

Lowering salt in the diet is recommended as well as increasing potassium, which increases renal flow and acts as a diuretic to lower blood volume. Other important lifestyle modifications are cessation of smoking, moderating alcohol intake, and exercise/weight reduction.
Drug treatments include diuretics to increase urine volume and lower blood volume, B1-adrenergic receptor blockers (atenolol), ACEIs (angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitors), calcium channel blockers, and ARBs (angiotensin II receptor blockers). ACEI and ARBs are most commonly prescribed.

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15
Q

What are the dangers of hypertension

A

Hypertension is the “silent killer” because most are asymptomatic until substantial damage occurs. Problems from hypertension include a high after load that makes it difficult for ventricles to eject blood. Ventricles thus work harder and this causes pathological growth (hypertrophy) that increases risk of arrhythmias and heart failure. High pressure may also damage cerebral blood vessels leading to a cerebrovascular accident (stroke). Hypertension also contributes to development of atherosclerosis which leads to heart failure and stroke.

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16
Q

Define shock and name the types of shock (briefly define them)

A

Circulatory shock occurs when there is inadequate blood perfusion of tissues caused by pump failure, bleeding, or vessel dilation.
Hypovolemic shock = due to low blood volume (hemorrhage, dehydration, burns)
Septic shock = due to abnormal immune response to infection
Anaphylactic shock = due to severe allergic reaction, often from bee stings and penicillin which directly enter blood stream, that releases histamine (vasodilator) and decreases peripheral resistance
Neurogenic shock = sympathetic tone is decreased, usually due to upper spinal cord damage or spinal anesthesia (raccoon eyes occur)
Cardiogenic shock = due to cardiac failure, commonly from infarction or severe arrhythmia or valve damage

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17
Q

Explain what causes hypovolemic shock

A

Hypovolemic shock occurs due to low blood volume from hemorrhage, dehydration, or burns. This decreases blood pressure and cardiac output and activates the baroreceptor reflex to produce tachycardia and vasoconstriction. Decreased blood flow to kidneys causes renin secretion (activates aldosterone) and ADH to conserve water. Capillary filtration also decreases to raise blood volume at the expense of interstitial fluid volume. Result is a person with low blood pressure, rapid pulse, cold clammy skin, and reduced urine output. The blood that remains is diverted to the brain and heart.

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18
Q

*Explain what causes septic shock

A

Sepsis (life threatening immune response to infection) with persistent hypertension causes septic shock. This occurs due to gram negative bacteria with a cell wall lipopolysaccharide called Endotoxin that activates the enzyme Nitric Oxide Synthase (within macrophages) to produce nitric oxide and promote vasodilation. This causes a dangerous fall in blood pressure. Drugs that inhibit nitric oxide are effective treatments.

(endotoxin also causes Disseminated Intravascular Coagulation!)

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19
Q

What is congestive heart failure and what causes it

A

CHF is when cardiac output is insufficient to maintain the blood flow required. May be due to heart disease or hypertension. Common disease causes are myocardial infarction, aortic valve stenosis, and incompetence of the aortic/bicuspid valves. This can become a vicious cycle of positive feedback where a myocardial infarction occurs and causes heart failure that causes arrhythmia that cause more infarctions and so on.
CHF can also result from electrolyte imbalances. Excessive plasma K+ and low Ca2+ stop heart in diastole (vice versa stops in systole).

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20
Q

Describe the results of congestive heart failure

A

Increased venous volume and pressure results. Failure of left ventricle raises left arterial pressure and produces pulmonary congestion and edema, causing shortness of breath and fatigue, can be fatal. Failure of right ventricle raises right arterial pressure and causes congestion and edema in the systemic circulation. Reaction of the body is similar to hypovolemic shock, the sympathetic system increases heart rate/contractility and vasoconstriction while renin increases. Result is elevated blood volume along with chronically low cardiac output and hypertrophy of ventricles

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21
Q

Describe the two categories of immune system

A

Innate/nonspecific immunity: inherited mechanisms in epithelial membranes including skin and mucous membranes. these are a physical barrier to pathogens and secrete antimicrobial peptides. Some also have strong acidity to kill pathogens and phagocytosis. Genes are inherited and so limited, and innate immunity combats whole categories of pathogens (like gram-negative lipopolysaccharides/endotoxin)

Adaptive/specific/acquired immunity: a function of lymphocytes that improve ability to fight infection after prior exposure (immunological memory). Adaptive immunity also increases innate immunity effectiveness (trained immunity). Specific features of pathogens are recognized by an enormous number of varied genes (not inherited) produced by genetic changes in lymphocytes during life.

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22
Q

Describe activation of innate immunity, what molecules are recognized? What recognizes them? Give two examples of this activation pathway

A

Pathogen Recognition Receptors (PRRs) recognize Pathogen-Associated Molecular Patterns (PAMPs) that are unique to invaders and produce an immune response. Genes encoding PRRs are inherited.
Toll-like receptors are a PRR stimulated by Lipopolysaccharides (LPS, endotoxin) which are PAMPs in membranes of gram-negative bacteria. The toll-like receptors on dendritic cells and macrophages then secrete chemokine and cytokines to promote immune response (both innate and adaptive!)
NOD-like receptors are a PRR located in the *cytoplasm and recognize intracellular molecules from bacteria. Then they form inflammasomes which activated Caspase to produce cytokines, leading to apoptosis. (Crohn’s disease is a result of mutated NOD genes)

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23
Q

Describe the complement system. What activates it?

A

The complement system integrates innate and adaptive immune responses. Proteins in the plasma become activated when antibodies bond their molecular targets (antigens) and the antigen-antibody complex then activates complement proteins (innate system) that promote phagocytosis and lysis of the target cell.

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24
Q

What are DAMPs and what are they released in response too?

A

Danger-associated molecular patterns occur when tissue damage causes necrosis. DAMPs include lots of cellular molecules (nucleic acids, proteins) that are exposed to immune cells after cell injury that stimulate innate immune response and inflammation. **This is unlike what occurs when cells die by apoptosis, where DAMPs are not expressed and no inflammation occurs (failure of this system = Lupus)

25
Q

What are the three major groups of phagocytic cells

A
  1. Neutrophils (polymorphonuclear cells) are the most abundant.
  2. Mononuclear phagocyte system cells including Monocytes, Macrophages, and Dendritic cells
  3. Organ specific phagocytes including Langerhans cells (epidermal dendritic cells) of epidermis, Kupffer cells (stellate macrophages) of liver, and Microglia of brain.
26
Q

Which cells are fixed phagocytes? where are these located and what function do they serve?

A

Kupffer cells in the liver and phagocytic cells in spleen and lymph nodes. These are immobile (fixed) in the walls of the sinusoids of the organ and as blood flows through the sinusoids, foreign chemicals and debris are removed. Invading pathogens are effectively removed in this manner so blood is sterile after passing through liver and spleen.

27
Q

Describe the series of events following macrophage recognition of a PAMP. How are cells attracted to the area and how is the microbe destroyed? Why does inflammation occur?

A

Toll-like receptors recognize PAMPs and secrete pro-inflammatory cytokines, a subclass of cytokines that attract chemicals are called chemokines. Neutrophils are attracted to the infection site by Chemotaxis (due to chemokines) and then monocytes arrive later (and can be transformed into macrophages if needed). If infection spreads, phagocytic cells from the blood may join those in the tissue by Extravasation or Diapedesis. Phagocytic cells have receptors for microbial molecules (and antibodies for opsonization) that trigger phagocytosis. Phagocyte eats microbe and fuses it with lysosome for digestion. Lysosomal enzymes may be released before fusion is complete, killing the cell and causing inflammation!

28
Q

What signals apoptosis? does inflammation occur?

A

Cells signal macrophages to kill them by displaying Phosphatidylserine on their surface. Activation of phagocytosis in this way suppresses inflammation and limits collateral damage. Also remember that no DAMPs are expressed (DAMPs cause inflammation)

29
Q

*How is a fever caused?

A

The preoptic area of the hypothalamus is the thermoregulatory center that maintains body temperature. It is reset upward by prostaglandin PGE2 which produces fever in response to Pyrogens. Exogenous pyrogens include lipopolysaccharide (endotoxin) from gram-negative bacteria which then stimulates an Endogenous pyrogen like interleukin-1 which stimulates PGE2. The result in the preoptic area is to direct increased metabolism and cutaneous vasoconstriction, raising body temp to fever. Moderate fever is beneficial in decreasing plasma iron concentration and increasing neutrophil and interferon activity, fighting infection.

30
Q

What do interferons cause and what are the types of interferons? What protein is produced that stimulates interferon production?

A

Interferons produce nonspecific short-acting resistance to viral infection. Infection stimulates production of STING (stimulator of interferon genes) which causes transcription of interferons in the host cell.
Alpha and Beta interferons are produced by most cells in the body. They are messengers to protect other cellist the vicinity of an infected cell
Gamma interferons are produced by innate lymphoid cells (natural killer cells) and helper/cytotoxic T lymphocytes. They stimulate genes involved in immune function, including phagocytosis and chemokine production.

31
Q

Describe what an antibody is and how they were discovered. What do antibodies recognize?

A

Emil Adolf von Behring injected guinea pig with sublethal dose of diphtheria toxin. It survived and could then survive previously lethal doses. Injections of the first pigs plasma to a second conferred immunity. Antibodies were the specific chemicals responsible for the immunity.
Antibodies are produced in response to antigens and are specific to them. Large complex molecules can have multiple antigenic determinant sites (epitopes) which will produce/combine with different antibodies. Some very simple structures, like plastics used in implants, avoid producing antibody response.

32
Q

What are small antigens called and what problem can they cause? (name the specific disease)

A

Haptens are small organic molecules that are not antigenic by themselves but cam become antigenic if they bind to proteins. for example, penicillin can bind to platelets and trigger autoimmune response causing Drug Induced Thrombocytopenia Purpura

33
Q

What are immunoassays and what are some examples of when they would be used?

A

Immunoassays use the specific binding of antibodies to determine if an antigen is present. If antigen-antibody reaction occurs then agglutination (clumping) becomes visible and the sample is positive for the antigen. Used in blood typing and pregnancy tests.

34
Q

What is menopause and what causes it? What is the period before menopause called?

A

Menopause is cessation of ovarian activity and menstruation at age ~51. 5-10 years prior to menopause is Perimenopause, when menstruation is irregular. Menopause is caused by a fall in estradiol due to ovarian changes (not pituitary, FSH and LH actually increase). In post menopausal women, estrogen is only present as Estrone formed from androstenedione and dehydroepiandrosterone (DHEA, from adrenal cortex) in adipose tissue. Women with more adipose tissue are thus higher in estrogen and have less propensity for osteoporosis

35
Q

What are symptoms of menopause? what are they caused by?

A

Withdrawal of estradiol secretion from ovaries causes:

  1. vasomotor disturbances and urogenital atrophy
  2. vasomotor disturbances produce hot flashes
  3. atrophy of urethra, vaginal wall, vaginal glands, and loss of lubrication
  4. increased risk for atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease and progression of osteoporosis
36
Q

how many sperm achieve capacitation? What signals cause capacitation and what attracts sperm to an ovum?

A

of the 300 million sperm ejaculated, 100 survive to fallopian tubes and 10% gain the ability to fertilize an ovum, called capacitation.
Capacitation includes increasing pH, Ca2+ concentration, and cAMP. Alkaline female reproductive tract increases sperm swimming ability by activating Dynein (ATPase molecular motors). Progesterone near the ovary activates Ca2+ channels, called CatSper (cationic channel of sperm) to further increase swimming ability. Increased Ca2+ causes hyper activation where flagellum beats harder. Sperm is attracted to ovum by both chemotaxis (chemical attraction) and thermotaxis (heat attraction)

37
Q

Where does fertilization occur? describe the series of events in fertilization

A

Sperm binds to ovum in the uterine TUBES. Binding of the zone pellucida and Ca2+ (from CatSper) trigger the Acrosomal Reaction where the acrosome membrane fuses with plasma membrane of sperm releases acrosomal enzymes by exocytosis. Hyaluronidase is one enzyme which digests hyaluronic acid to allow sperm a path through zone pellucida to oocyte. Fusion releases phospholipase C which acts through inositol triphosphate to release Ca2+ from ER, causing Ca2+ Wave. The wave activates fertilized oocytes to block other sperm (prevent polyspermy) and allow the second meiotic division to occur. Within 12 hours, nuclear membranes disappear and a diploid (46) zygote is formed.

38
Q

two types of twins

A

Monozygotic twins: from a single zygote that splits. Identical

Dizygotic twins: from two different zygotes produced by different ovum and sperm. Fraternal

39
Q

What products does the sperm contribute to the zygote

A

Half the chromosomes, centrosome (needed for organization of microtubules during mitosis), and some mitochondria from the mid piece (all are soon eliminated, so all mitochondrial DNA is maternal)

40
Q

What is the timeframe of when fertilization can occur?

A

Fertilization can occur if intercourse takes place 3-5 days prior to ovulation (sperm can survive 3-5 days in female reproductive tract) or within 1 day after ovulation (unfertilized secondary oocyte disintegrates 12-24 hours after ovulation).

41
Q

What is orthostatic/postural hypotension? What mechanisms typically resolves this issue and under what conditions is it not easily resolved?

A

Orthostatic (or postural) hypotension is a lowering of blood pressure upon standing that causes a person to feel dizzy and weak, and in extreme cases can even cause fainting (syncope). Normally, the baroreceptor reflex compensates for the fall in blood pressure when a person stands, which causes about 700 mL of blood to pool in the lower limbs. However, if a person has low blood pressure because of dehydration, medications (such as beta-adrenergic receptor blockers), or any other cause—including postprandial hypotension among the elderly, where the pressure falls after eating—orthostatic hypotension can result.

42
Q

What may cause preeclampsia and what are the symptoms (how to diagnose)? What is the cure?

A

Preeclampsia, formerly called toxemia of pregnancy, is the new onset of hypertension (differs from gestational hypertension) Thrombocytopenia and abnormally large amounts of proteins in the urine (proteinuria) may occur. Proteinuria indicates that plasma proteins are abnormally leaking through the kidneys’ filtering units (glomeruli) into the urine. This lowers the plasma protein concentration and oncotic pressure, producing edema and swelling of the feet, legs, or hands. The causes of preeclampsia are believed to stem from dysfunction of the placenta, and the risk of preeclampsia is increased by obesity. If preeclampsia becomes severe, the hypertension can cause seizures and stroke. The only cure for preeclampsia is delivery of the baby.

43
Q

Where do lymphocytes originate? *Where do the two types of lymphocytes mature (why are they named the way that they are)

A

Lymphocytes originate in bone marrow and can mature in thymus, spleen, and lymph nodes.
T-cells (T lymphocytes, thymus dependent) are from the bone marrow and are seeded and processed in the thymus
B-cells (B lymphocytes) originate and mature in the bone marrow. The B is for Bursa of Fabricius (chicken organ) and in humans a Bursa Equivalent.
*The bone marrow and thymus are the Primary Lymphoid Organs because they are the sites of B and T cell production

44
Q

*Describe the functions of B and T cells. What are the terms for the immunity provided by either cell?

A

B cells = Humoral Immunity (antibody-mediated immunity). secretes antibodies into the blood/lymph to combat Extracellular bacteria, Extracellular viruses, Bacterial toxins, and other Protein toxins.

T-cells = Cell-Mediated Immunity (CMI). directly attacks infections such as intracellular bacteria, intracellular viruses, fungi, protozoans, helminths (worms), transplanted tissues, and cancer cells

45
Q

How long to T-cells live and when are new cells made? What happens to T-cell repopulation with aging?

A

T-cells live 6-9 years but new cells are continuously made to provide cell-mediated immunity. This is especially important during chemotherapy or HIV infection when T-cells are depleted. Repopulation occurs more slowly the older a person is because the thymus atrophies. This decreases cell-mediated immunity and increases risk of diseases that T-cells target (such as cancer!)

46
Q

What are the secondary lymphoid organs? What function do they serve

A

Lymph nodes, spleen, tonsils, and Peyer’s Patches (intestine). These are located across epithelial membranes where antigens could enter blood/lymph, so they serve to filter blood (spleen) and lymph (other organs). They collect pathogens and present them to macrophages that are ceaselessly traveling from primary to secondary lymphoid organs and sharing the pathogen news with lymphocytes to increase their immunity. This process is performed by Antigen-Presenting Cells (dendritic cells and macrophages)

47
Q

*What causes the redness and swelling associated with inflammation? Describe the mechanism

A

Microbial infection stimulates toll-like receptors and activates innate system (PRR binds PAMPs). Mast cells in the tissues (identified by high heparin) degranulate and release Histamine which produces bronchiolar constriction and blood vessel DILATION (=redness and warmth). Histamine (and serotonin) also causes gaps to form in the endothelium, making leaky vessels that cause Edema, and allowing extravasation of leukocytes. Leukocytes roll towards chemokines secreted by Mast cells (chemotaxis) then enter tissue by extravasation/diapedesis.

48
Q

What is the order of leukocytes arriving at an infection and what do they each do? What do they do at the end of infection?

A
  1. Neutrophils: first responders to chemokines produced by Mast cells. They release molecules to recruit monocytes and lymphocytes. most die in the fight.
  2. Monocytes: convert to macrophages and engulf pathogen, also release nitric oxide to aid bacteria destruction. most die in the fight
  3. T Lymphocytes. part of the cell-mediated immunity. Can survive and re-enter circulation
  4. Much later, B Lymphocytes will produce antibodies against the invading bacteria

After pathogen destruction, neutrophils apoptosis and macrophages release growth factors to end inflammation

49
Q

*What causes the formation of pus associated with inflammation?

A

Neutrophils recruited to the infection release Neutrophil Extracellular Traps (NETs) which immobilize bacteria, facilitate phagocytosis, and may directly kill them by antimicrobial enzymes. (NETs also activate clotting factor XII). They also release extracellular matrix degrading products and proteases that liquify surrounding tissues. This produces a viscous, protein-rich fluid that, together with dead neutrophils, forms PUS. Pus is beneficial because it closes capillaries and blocks spread of bacteria.

50
Q

*What causes the pain associated with inflammation? What drug interferes with this process and how?

A

Prostaglandin E2 (PGE2) is released as a cytokine and lowers the pain threshold. Aspirin and other non steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs inhibit Cyclooxygenase (COX-1 and COX-2) that produce prostaglandins to relieve pain.

51
Q

Review the symptoms of local inflammation and what causes each (in brief). In what disease does inflammation play a pathogenic role?

A
  1. Redness (rubor) and warmth (calor) = Histamine stimulated vasodilation
  2. Swelling (edema, tumor) = Histamine makes vessels leaky
  3. Pus = breakdown products from proteases and dead neutrophils
  4. Pain (dolor) = prostaglandin E2 (PGE2) lowers pain threshold

Inflammation is protection, but can also damage the body. Alzheimer’s, multiple sclerosis, atherosclerosis (!), asthma, rheumatoid arthritis, systemic lupus erythematous, and diabetes mellitus are all made worse by inflammation

52
Q

What does a B cell multiply to proceed after exposure to an antigen?

A

Memory cells - indistinguishable from original B cell but retains the memory so it can respond better if it sees antigen again

Plasma cells - cells that produce tons of antibodies specific to that antigen (epitope)

53
Q

What are the classes of plasma proteins separated by electrophoresis? Which is the smallest (farthest migration) and largest (least migration)

A
Albumin = smallest, migrates far
Alpha-1 globulin
Alpha-2 globulin
Beta globulin
Gamma globulin = largest, least migration. Contains Antibodies!!
54
Q

Name the classes of immunoglobulins

A
immunoglobulins = antibodies = gamma globulins 
IgG = most common subclass and smallest, can cross placental barrier and cause Erythroblastosis Fetalis
IgA = abundant in mucosal membranes
IgE = involved in allergic reaction
55
Q

Describe the structure of antibodies. How was the variable portion determined?

A

Two long heavy chains (H chains) are joined to two short light chains (L chains) in the formation of a Y. The stalk of the Y is the “crystallizable fragment” or Fc and the top is the “antigen-binding fragment” or Fab. The Fc region is constant and Fab is variable, specific to an antigen. This was determined by examining multiple myelomas, tumors arising from a single B lymphocyte’s division, where patients all had the same Fc region but different Fab regions

56
Q

*How does antibody recognition of an antigen cause destruction of the pathogen?

A

Bacteria are tagged with antibodies which serve as the signal of a target for phagocytosis (ability to cause phagocytosis is Opsonization). Antibody-antigen complexes induce activation of Complement proteins, a nonspecific defense system, that are present in plasma. (Antibodies activate the Classic pathway, but the faster Alternative pathway is initiated by unique polysaccharides that coat bacterial cells). The pathway of 9 complement proteins culminate in Complement Fixation where proteins C5-C9 form a Membrane Attack Complex that opens a large pore, killing the bacterial cell through osmotic influx of water

57
Q

What pathway is responsible for hemolysis seen in incompatible transfusion reactions and Hemolytic disease of the newborn?

A

The Classical Complement pathway. The antigens on the foreign blood cells are recognized by antibodies and this complex activates the classic complement pathway, culminating in destruction of the target blood cell by C5-C9 membrane attack complex

58
Q

What are the steps in In-vitro fertilization? How oocytes are produced, how they are harvested, how they are fertilized, and how they are implanted

A

a woman undergoes ovarian hyperstimulation by injections of gonadotropin (usually FSH) to stimulate the development of many ovarian follicles. Other GnRH analogues prevent normal ovulation from occurring so that she will have many follicles that develop for the harvesting of oocytes. Tubes guided by vaginal ultrasound then aspirate the follicular fluid and the oocytes from the ovary. Fertilization is produced by intracytoplasmic sperm injection (ICSI), in which a single, capacitated sperm is injected through the zona pellucida and into the cytoplasm of an isolated secondary oocyte. Three or more embryos grown this way are usually transferred at the same time and any remaining embryos are preserved frozen in liquid nitrogen.