Acute Inflammation Flashcards

1
Q

What are causes for acute inflammation?

A
  • Tissue death: Ischaemia, trauma, toxins, chemical insults, radiation, thermal injury
  • Infection: pyogenic (bacterial)
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2
Q

What are the purposes of acute inflammation?

A
  • Clear away dead tissue
  • Locally protect from infection
  • Allow access of immune system components
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3
Q

What are the 3 outcomes of acute inflammation?

A
  • Cells can regrow= Healing by regeneration
  • Cells cannot regrow= Healing by repair
  • Damaging agents persist= chronic inflammation
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4
Q

What are clinical features of inflammation and why do they occur?

A

Cardinal signs

  • Calor= heat (vascular dilatation)
  • Rubor= redness (vascular dilatation)
  • Dolor= pain
  • Tumor= swelling (inflammatory exudate into surrounding tissue)
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5
Q

Name different types of inflammation and describe them

A
  • Serous= produces serous exudate
  • Fibrinous= exudate of coagulated fibrin
  • Purulent= suppurative
  • Pseudomembranous= on mucosal surface of a false membrane composed of precipitated fibrin, necrotic epithelium, and inflammatory leukocytes.
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6
Q

What are components of an acute inflammatory response?

A
  • Vascular reaction=dilatation/change in flow
  • Exudative reaction= tumor
  • Cellular reaction= migration of inflammatory cells out of vessel
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7
Q

What are systemic effects if inflammation?

A
  • Pyrexia (raised temperature)

- Acute phase reaction

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8
Q

Describe the vascular reaction part of the inflammatory process

A

-Microvascular dilatation
-Increased permeability:
>mediated=NO, bradykinin, histamine, Leukotriene B4,
complement components
>non-mediated= direct damage to endothelium, toxins,
physical agents

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9
Q

Describe the components of inflammatory exudate?

A
  • Protein rich= immunoglobulins, fibrinogen

- constantly turning over (spread of drugs/antibiotics, supply of nutrients)

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10
Q

Describe the cellular part of the inflammatory reaction

A

-Accumulation of neutrophils in extracellular space

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11
Q

Describe neutrophils

A
  • Produced in bone marrow
  • Most common white cell
  • Inc in acute inflammation
  • Short lifespan
  • Motile, amoeboid, can move into tissue
  • Phagocytic and microbiocidal
  • O2 independant, lysozyme, lactoferrin cationic proteins
  • O2 dependent Myeloperoxidase, H2O2, Cl-,O2-
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12
Q

How do inflammatory cells move in a blood vessel?

A
  • Margination
  • Rolling & adhesion=pavementing
  • Migration
  • Chemotaxis
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13
Q

What are the 2 types of acute inflammatory mediators?

A
  • Cell derived

- Plasma derived

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14
Q

Name types of cell derived mediators?

A
  • Stored= Histamine

- Synthesised= Prostaglandins, PAF, Leukotrienes, NO, cytokines (TNFa, IL-8), chemokines

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15
Q

Name types of plasma derived mediators?

A
  • Kinin system
  • Clotting pathway
  • Thrombolytic pathway
  • Complement pathway
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16
Q

What mediators cause vascular dilatation, inc permeability, neutrophil adhesion & chemotaxis?

A
  • VD= Histamine, NO, I2
  • IP= Histamine, bradykinin, NO
  • NA= upregulation of adhesion molecules- IL-2
  • NC= IL-8, chemokines
17
Q

What are the components of pus?

A

Neutrophils, cellular debris and bacteria