Acute Inflammation Flashcards

1
Q

Define acute inflammation

A

Protective changes as a response to injury in order to maintain the integrity of a higher organism

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2
Q

List the cardinal signs of acute inflammation

A
Rubor (redness)
Calor (heat)
Tumor (swelling)
Dolor (pain)
Loss of function
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3
Q

Give the 6 causes of acute inflammation

A
Micro-organism (infection)
Mechanical (trauma)
Chemical (pH)
Physical (heat/cold)
Necrosis
Hypersensitivity
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4
Q

Name the three processes which give rise to acute inflammation

A

Vessel radius changes
Permeability changes
Neutrophil movement

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5
Q

Describe how changes in vessel radius give rise to acute inflammation

A

Increased flow of blood is caused by successive arteriolar constriction/dilation followed by smooth muscle relaxation
(Poiseulle’s Law)

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6
Q

Describe how changes in permeability give rise to acute inflammation

A

Swelling is caused by net movement of material (plasma/protein/fibrinogen/immunoglobulin) out of capillaries
Causes an increase in blood viscosity leading to stasis (decreased/low flow rate)

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7
Q

Describe how neutrophil movement gives rise to acute inflammation

A

Loss of normal laminar flow is caused by RBCs gathering in the centre of the blood vessels and neutrophils gathering at the edges near the endothelium
Neutrophil;
Margination (movement to edges)
Pavementing (adherence to endothelium)
Emigration (movement from endothelium to extravascular tissues)

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8
Q

How is acute inflammation resolved?

A
Isolation and destruction of inciting agent
Phagocytosis of debris by macrophages
Epithelial regeneration
Exudate filters away
Normalisation of vascular changes
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9
Q

What is meant by the margination of neutrophils?

A

Movement to edges of blood vessels

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10
Q

What is meant by the pavementing of neutrophils?

A

Adherence to endothelium

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11
Q

What is meant by the emigration of neutrophils?

A

Movement from endothelium to extravascular tissues

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12
Q

Give three benefits of acute inflammation

A

Rapid response (due to cardinal signs - protection)
Neutrophil action
Localisation (by plasma proteins)

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13
Q

Give the possible outcomes of acute infection?

A

Resolution
Suppuration (pus formation)
Organisation
Development of chronic inflammation

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14
Q

What suffix is given to conditions of acute inflammation and give some examples

A
  • it is

e. g. meningitis, pancreatitis, appendicitis

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15
Q

What is the role of the neutrophil in acute inflammation?

A

Chemotaxis
Adherence
Release of granule contents
Phagocytosis and destruction of foreign antigens

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16
Q

What are the contents of neutrophil granules?

A

Oxidants and enzymes

17
Q

What happens to neutrophils when they release the contents of their granules?

A

They die and contribute toward pus formation (suppuration)

18
Q

Name two plasma proteins involved in acute inflammation

A

Fibrinogen

Immunoglobulins

19
Q

What is the function of fibrinogen in acute inflammation?

A

Parts cleaved off to form fibrin
Polymerisation to form clots
Hems in the exudate to localise the process

20
Q

What are mediators of acute inflammation?

A
  • on endothelial surface

- released from cells into plasma

21
Q

What are the functions of mediators of acute inflammation?

A
Vasodilation
Increased permeability
Neutrophil adhesion
Chemotaxis
Itch & Pain
  • Gradation/balance exists - not just an on/off mechanism; alternating actions depend on timing/circumstance
  • Favour or inhibit the inflammation, depending on bodily need
22
Q

Give some example of mediators of acute inflammation and their functions

A

Histamine - vasodilation and increased permeability

Serotonin & Prostaglandins - vasoconstriction

Leukotrienes - increased permeability and smooth muscle constriction

Hydrogen peroxide - amplification of other mediators

23
Q

What is the difference between bacteraemia and septicaemia?

A

The presence of bacteria in the blood versus their growth

24
Q

What is septic shock an example of?

A

Systemic effect of acute inflammation

25
Q

Give the symptoms of septic shock?

A
  • peripheral vasodilation
  • tachycardia
  • hypotension
  • pyrexia
  • haemorrhagic skin rash
26
Q

What causes the tachycardia associated with septic shock?

A

During vasodilation, systemic vascular resistance decreases
Cardiac output must adjust to the changes in SVR in order to regulate blood pressure

BP = CO X SVR

When CO can no longer cope, the hypotension comes in

27
Q

How is pus organised in acute inflammation?

A

In an abscess surrounded by a pyogenic membrane

28
Q

What is pyaemia?

A

Pus in the bloodstream

29
Q

What is empyema?

A

Pus in a pre-existing hollow cavity

30
Q

Describe organisation as a possible outcome of acute inflammation?

A

Formation of granulation tissue for healing and repair

Leads to fibrosis and scar tissue formation

Made from;
new capillaries/fibroblasts/collagen/macrophages