cerebral inflammation Flashcards

1
Q

what is meningitis?

A

inflammation of the meninges caused by viral or bacterial infection

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2
Q

what is encephalitis

A

inflammation of the BRAIN caused by infection OR AUTOIMMUNE mechanisms

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3
Q

what is cerebral vasculitis

A

inflammation of blood vessel walls (angitis)

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4
Q

why do dyes and ohher traces injected IV accumulate in most tissues but not in CNS?

A

due to blood brain barrier

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5
Q

describe broadly the vascularisation of CNS and state a fact that illustrates this

A

dense, no neuron is more than 100μm from a capillary

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6
Q

what makes the bbb?

A

most importantly the vascular morphology! Also glial cells

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7
Q

what is the difference between other cappilaries and CNS cap that leads to bbb?

A

extensive tight junctions at the endothelial cell-cell contacts,
massively reducing solute and fluid leak across the capillary wall

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8
Q

what is the purpose of the BBB

A

TO HAVE GREATER CONTROL over what enters the cns circulation

blood borne infecitons have reduced entry to cns tissue

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9
Q

what vessels do brain capillaries stem from?

A

Pial vessels

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10
Q

how to the necessary substances go into CNS if the junctions are so tight in bbb?

A

though influx and efflux transporters: membrane transporters specific to each relevant substance

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11
Q

what are astrocytes and what is their role in BBB

A

a specialized type of glial cell that is vital in the maintnance of the bbb integrity (astrocyte “endfeet” sitting tight to the vasculature)

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12
Q

what are the 4 main mechanisms of pathophysiology in BBB disruption

A

1) fibrinogen leakage (from cappilaries to astrocytes)

2) astrogliosis (astrocytes become activated and undergo structural changes )

3) astrocytic end-feet change

4) collagenous disruption

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13
Q

initial symptoms of encephalitis

A

flu-like with pyrexia (high body temperature) and headache

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14
Q

sympotms of encephalitis as time goes by (within hours days or weeks )

A

-confusion or disorientation
-seizures or fits
-changes in personality and behaviour
-difficulty speaking
-weakness or loss of movement
-loss of consciousness

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15
Q

most common cause of encephalitis and most common specific examples

A

viral infection,

Herpes Simplex
Measles
Varicella (chickenpox)
Rubella (German measles)

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16
Q

other rarer causes of encephalitis

A

-Mosquito, tick and other insect bites

-Bacterial and fungal infections

-Trauma

-Autoimmune

17
Q

treatments of encephalitis?

A

depends onthe underlyingcause, but may include:

Antivirals e.g. acyclovir
Steroids. (swelling
Antibiotics/antifungals
Analgesics
Anti-convulsants
Ventilation

18
Q

what other new health crisis is associated with long term neurological deficits?

A

covid 19

19
Q

what is multiple sclerosis

A

autoimmune demyelinating disease of CNS

20
Q

what is the progression of MS in terms of the neurological deficits? (2 phases)

A

first phase usually “relapsing- remitting” nature

second progression: linear increase in neuro deficits

21
Q

what are the neuro deficit relapses caused by/ linked to?

A

inflammation

22
Q

what is the seconf phase neuro def progression linked to?

A

axonal loss and neurodegeneration

23
Q

4 terms that describe the cellular pathology of ms

A

Inflammation

Demyelination

Axonal loss

Neurodegeneration

24
Q

where is the brain damage mostly seen in MS brain scan

A

atound ventricles

25
Q

why do sympotms cary in ms?

A

because the amount and location of damage to the nervous system is different in each person with MS

26
Q

what happens during inflammaiton in ms

A

perivascular immune cell infiltration (CD3 T-cells and CD20 B-cells)

27
Q

how dangerous is meningitis death wise? how many people affected per year? how many with permanent impariment?

A

6th most common infectious disease killer
Affects more than 5 million people per annum worldwide
Leaves 1 in 5 of the infected people with an impairment

28
Q

bacterial causes of meningitis

A

Meningococcal
Pneumococcal
Haemophilus Influenzae type b (Hib)
Streptococcal –

29
Q

– the most common cause of bacterial meningitis in UK

A

meningococcal

30
Q

the main cause of meningtitis in new-born babies

A

streptococcal

31
Q
A