Lect 7 - Chronic Inflammation Flashcards

1
Q

what changes in acute inflammation to make it chronic?

A

Most common in supporative (pus forming) acute inflammation
Pus can form an abscess
If deep enough the walls thicken
Granulation and fibrous tissue
Recurrent acute can lead to chronic e.g cholecystitis = gall bladder inflammation usually due to stones

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2
Q

what Morphological Features would you see in chronic inflammation?

A

Infiltration with mononuclear cells (macrophages, lymphocytes, plasma cells)
Tissue destruction
Healing by fibrosis

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3
Q

on a cellular level, what would be observed in chronic inflammation?

A

Cellular infiltrate of lymphocytes, plasma cells and macrophages

Production of new fibrous tissue from granulation tissue

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4
Q

how do macrophages behave in a site of chronic inflammation?

A

Increase inflammation, stimulate immune system

Macrophages already at sight of damage release cytokines which signal to monocytes

Monocytes enter damaged tissue from endothelium of blood vessel (leukocyte extravasion) = RECRUITMENT

Macrophages PROLIFERATE locally in damaged tissue

IMMOBILISATION of macrophages within tissue

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5
Q

macrophages also have a couple of other important functions in chronic inflammation. what are they?

A

They cause the fibrosis by releasing growth factors and other molecules.

induse angiogensis factors for blood vessel formation in granulation tissue.

They can also hold and contain viable organisms if they cannot kill them (granulomas) – examples include M. tuberculosis and M. leprae.

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6
Q

what is granulation tissue?

A

GRANULATION TISSUE is new connective tissue and blood vessels that form on the surface of a wound during healing. Grows up from baase of wound.
Appears light red or dark pink due to capillaries, painless if healthy, soft and moist.

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7
Q

what is fibrosis?

A

Formation of excess fibrous connective during repair of damaged tissue
Scarring
Called fibroma if arises from 1 cell line
Macrophage induced laying down of connective tissue inc collagen

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8
Q

what type of cell forms in granulomatous inflammation?

A

Histiocytic giant cells can form where material is indigestible to macrophages e.g tubercle bacilli which have cell walls resistant to macrophages
They’re multinucleate giant cells. May have >100 nuclei.
Develop when 2+ macrophages try to engulf the same particle.
No known function. Not phagocytic.
Given different names according to appearance

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9
Q

what dies eases lead to Granulomatous disease?

A
Bacterial = TB, leprosy
Parasitic = schistosomiasis
Fungal = cryptococcus
Synthetic materials = silicosis
Unknown = Sarcoidosis, crohn’s disease.
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10
Q

what messengers are particularly important in formation and function of granuloma

A

TNF alpha and INF gamma

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11
Q

what layers of a TB granuloma are there starting from the middle?

A
  1. Caseous necrosis
  2. Epithelioid macrophages and langhans-type giant cells
  3. lympocytes and plasma cells
  4. all encased with fibroblasts making a collagen structure to keep it all in.

BASICALLY BAD STUFF ->MACROPHAGES+GIANTS -> LYMPHOCYTES -> COLLAGEN COAT

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12
Q

what makes langhans-type giant cells?

A

lots of Epithelioid macrophages together

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13
Q

give some examples of diseases in which chronic inflammatory processes have a role

A

Chronic inflammation is involved in cardiovascular system response to MI – myocardial fibrosis

Inflammation is involved in atheroma formation – macrophages adhere to epithelium and recruit other cells, process lipids that accumulate in plaques

In MS inflammation; plasma cells and T lymphocytes are seen in white matter where macrophages break down myelin

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