Pathophysiology of asthma Flashcards

1
Q

Method of sensitisation

A

Exposure of genetically predisposed individuals to allergen
Mediated through Th2 lymphocytes
Cytokines from lymphocytes cause mast cell to produce IgE-R
Endothelial cells express receptors to attract eosinophils

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2
Q

Triggers and specificity

A

Allergens are specific
Occupational agents e.g. SO2, cigarette smoke are specific and non-specific
Cold, dry air, exercise, viruses, psychology (stress and anxiety) and drugs are all non-specific

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3
Q

Difference between specific and non-specific triggers

A

Specific trigger causes extrinsic asthma

Non specific trigger causes intrinsic asthma

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4
Q

Early phase of an asthma attack

A

Increase in resistance to airflow that peaks 30-60 mins after allergen exposure
Response to release of inflammatory mediators from mast cells

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5
Q

Late phase of an asthma attack

A

Can occur a long time after allergen exposure (6+hours) and maybe the cause of much night time asthma
Driven by a continuation of inflammation characterised by an influx of eosinophils into the lungs

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6
Q

Paradigm of asthma pathophysiology

A

Mast cell activation/ degranulation
Immediate inflammatory responses
Late inflammatory responses
All stages cause inflammation-induced airway remodelling

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7
Q

How do mast cells degranulate?

A

Cross linking IgE receptor by binding antigen
Mast cell degranulation
Release of histamine and other inflammatory mediators

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8
Q

Inflammatory cascade

A

Histamine release causes bronchoconstriction, increased mucus production, leukocyte recruitment, increased vascular permeability and vasodilation

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9
Q

How does bronchoconstriction occur and what are the effects?

A

An increase in mucus decreases airway diameter
Smooth muscle contraction narrows airway
Air trapping leads to hyperinflation
Narrowing of airway makes it harder to breath due to increased resistance

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10
Q

Mucous plugging

A

During expiration mucous gets stuck in the alveolus causing it to hyperinflate
Alveolus will fill up with CO2 causing oxygen to run out

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11
Q

Vasodilation and increased permeability

A

Inflammation causes swelling of the tissue due to oedema

When the wall of the bronchus swells, the diameter of the lumen decreases&raquo_space;> cannot solve with bronchodilators

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12
Q

Late phase bronchoconstriction

A

Oedema begun during early phase is more prominent
Sensory nerve fibres release inflammatory agents that can cause bronchoconstriction
increased parasympathetic activation ACh and M3 receptors = bronchoconstriction

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13
Q

Therapeutic goals

A

Reliever (bronchodilators) open the airways of a patient suffering an asthma attack
Preventer (corticosteroids) intervene in the remodelling process

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