Chronic Inflammation Flashcards

1
Q

Can chronic inflammation occur without acute inflammation ?

A

Yes

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2
Q

What is organisation ?

A

Replacement of destroyed tissue by granulation tissue.

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3
Q

Which factors favour resolution ?

A

Rapid destruction of causal agent
Rapid removal of fluid and debris by good drainage
Minimal cell death
Occurrence in tissue or organ with regenerative capability

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4
Q

What factors favour organisation ?

A

Presence of large amounts of fibrin
Consequential necrosis
Exudata and debris cannot be drained away

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5
Q

Which cells are present to replaces inflammatory exudate in chronic inflammation ?

A
  • Sprouting capillaries
  • Proliferation of fibroblasts
  • Infiltration of macrophages (rather than neutrophils as in acute inflammation)
  • Deposition of collagen
  • Presence of multinucleate giant cells and plasma cells
  • Layer of lymphocyte around vessels where new capillaries sprouting
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6
Q

Why is the appearance of a skin bruise undergoing chronic inflammation red and moist ?

A

Redness due to sprouting capillaries

Moist due to exudate

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7
Q

Who is responsible for regulating organisation ?

A

Growth factors (e.g. Tumour Necrosis Factor, Epidermal Growth Factor)

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8
Q

What different kinds of chronic inflammation exist ?

A

Primary and Moving from Acute Inflammation

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9
Q

What are examples of situations in which it is primary chronic inflammation. Give examples of conditions for these situations.

A
  • Resistance of infective agent to phagocytosis and intracellular killing (tuberculosis, leprosy, brucellosis, viral infections)
  • Foreign body reactions to endogenous materials (gout, in which metabolism is not getting rid of uric acid causing it to deposit in joints, resulting in arthritis.
  • Foreign body reactions to exogenous materials (asbestos)
  • Some autoimmune diseases including R. arthritis
  • Specific diseases of unknown aetiology (ulcerative colitis, causing damage to gut)
  • Primary granulomatous diseases (sarcoidosis, where large amounts of typically macrophages accumulate in organ/tissue and outside)
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10
Q

Which factors favour the progression from acute to chronic inflammation ? Give an example of a condition for each factor.

A
  • Indigestible substances
  • Deep seated suppurative inflammation without inadequate drainage by vascular or lymphatic system (possible abscess wall, granulation tissue, organisation of pus, fibrous scar). E.g. Osteomyelitis, chronic abscess in bone
  • Recurrent episodes of acute inflammation and healing E.g. chronic cholecystitis (wall replaced by fibrous tissue, macrophages and lymphocytes predominate over neutrophils)
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11
Q

What are diagnostic symptomatic features of chronic inflammation ? Give examples of each.

A
  • Chronic ulcer (e.g. mucosa breached)
  • Chronic abscess cavity (e.g. enpyema thoracic in pleural cavity)
  • Thickening of wall of hollow viscus
  • Granulomatous inflammation (e.g. tuberculosis)
  • Fibrosis
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12
Q

Which cells are present in chronic inflammation ?

A

Sprouting capillaries
Fibroblasts
Collagen (granulation tissue resulting in fibrosis)
Macrophages and plasma cells and lymphocytes

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13
Q

What are the microscopic features of :

  1. Macrophages
  2. Lymphocytes
  3. Plasma cells ?
A
  1. Macrophages- Either appears to have single, or lobed or bilobed. Larger armount of cytoplasm that other two. Can fuse to form granuloma/multinucleate giant cells. In chronic inflammation, may find something cause the damage in the center of those multinucleate cells.
  2. Lymphocytes- Not activated (naive). Large nucleus and small cytoplasm. When activated, vastly increased cytoplasm (nucleus also a little larger) to allow for antibody production.
  3. Plasma cells- eccentric nucleus. Activated version of B lymphocyte.
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14
Q

What is an example of leukocytes communicating ? How do they achieve such communication ? Why is this important ?

A

Macrophages with T cells and B cells to

i. activate them, so they form antibody secreting cells and/or cytokine secreting T cells)
ii. inactivate them to limit damage

Do so through direct cell contact or secretion of agents

Important to modulate and down-regulate immune response

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15
Q

What is the function of macrophages ?

A
  • Phagocytosis

- Producing cytokines

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16
Q

How can bacteria immunoevade macrophages ?

A

Myobacterium tuberculosis hides inside the macrophage (wishes to be phagosytosed), then is resistance to lysosomal enzymes so become intracellular parasites.

17
Q

How do microphages get activated ?

A

Activated on migration to area of inflammation by cells including macrophage activation factor, and migration inhibition factor which let them stay in site of inflammation.

18
Q

What is the path onwards from haemoatopoietic stem cell ?

A

Haemoatopoietic stem cell (in bone marrow) –> promonocyte (in bone marrow) –> monocyte (in bone marrow) –> monocyte (in blood) –> different kinds in different tissues for instance Kupffer cells (liver), melanocyte (skin), osteoclast (bone), microgial cell

19
Q

What is a granuloma ? A histiocyte ?

A

Aggregate of epithelioid macrophages

Macrophage in CT

20
Q

What is the granuloma’s main function ?

A

Turn off phagocytic activity and instead have secretory function.

21
Q

What does granuloma appear like ?

A

Central mutli-nucleate giant cells surrounded by epithelioid histiocytes with a peripheral rim of activated lymphocytes. In center may find caseation (necrotic center) due to infective agent or pus resulting in necrosis.

22
Q

What are the usual causes of granulomatous disease ?

A
  • Specific infections (causative agent indigestible)
  • Foreign bodies (causative agent indigestible)
  • Specific chemicals
  • Drug
  • Unknown
23
Q

Give specific examples of histiocytic giant cells.

A

Langan’s giant cells

Foreign body type giant cell

24
Q

What are distinguishing factors between acute and chronic ?

A

-ACUTE V CHRONIC

Neutrophil V macrophage
Quick and early V slower at later stage
Rapid full resolution V long term problems

25
Q

What are distinguishing factors between exudate and transudate ?

A

In exudate, increased vascular permeability, net flow, and high plasma protein content

26
Q

What are distinguishing factors between granulation tissue and granuloma ?

A

Granulation tissue: Tissue important in healing process with connective tissue and small blood vessels

Granuloma: Aggregate of macrophage-like cells (and other immune cells such as lymphocytes around)

27
Q

What is the difference between fibrin and fibrous ?

A

Fibrin is deposited in acute inflammation

-Fibrous is a typical scar tissue with collagen