Inflammation Flashcards

1
Q

What are the 5 key aspects of inflammation?

A
Heat
Swelling
Redness
Pain
Loss of function
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2
Q

What is the immune process behind inflammation?

A

Mast cells/macrophages detect pathogen
Release inflammatory mediators - cause vasodilation
Polymorphonuclear cells activated - release proteases with anti-microbial activity and mediators that recruit leukocytes
Endothelial cells activated - express cellular adhesion molecules - leukocytes in blood adhere at site of inflammation
Neutrophils leave vasculature - migrate to stimulus site - kill/phagocytose pathogens
Monocytes enter site - differentiate to macrophages - phagocytose microbes and release mediators
T-cells activated if response unsuccessful - response repeated - chronic inflammation - can damage host cells

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3
Q

Name 6 groups of inflammatory mediators and their effects

A

NO - heat and redness - increases blood flow
Histamine - heat, redness, and swelling - increases blood flow and vascular permeability
Bradykinin - heat, redness, swelling, and pain
Lipases, proteases, free radicals - loss of function
Prostaglandins - heat, pain, and swelling
Cytokines - pro-inflammatory/anti-inflammatory - change gene expression in target cell via binding to CS receptors

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4
Q

What is the process of IgE activation of mast cells?

A

Antigen binds to B-lymphocyte in blood
B-lymphocyte releases IgE
IgE binds to mast cells - degranulation - histamine release

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5
Q

Which histamine receptor is involved in allergic reactions and what is its mechanism?

A

H1

Via Gq - increases Ca2+

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6
Q

Which histamine receptor is involved in gastric acid secretion and what is its mechanism?

A

H2

Via Gs - increases cAMP

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7
Q

Through which receptor does histamine stimulate C fibres?

A

H1

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8
Q

Name an H1 antagonist

A

Diphrenhydramine

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9
Q

Name an H2 antagonist

A

Ranitidine

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10
Q

What is the key difference between old and new antihistamines?

A

Old cross BBB - cause dizziness, drowsiness, tinnitus

New do not

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11
Q

How is bradykinin synthesised in plasma?

A

Factor XIIa + prekallikrein -> plasma kallikrein

Plasma kallikrein + HMV kininogen -> bradykinin

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12
Q

How is bradykinin synthesised in glands, pancreas, kidneys, and neutrophils?

A

LMV kininogen -> kallidin

Kallidin -> aminopeptidase + bradykinin

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13
Q

What are the classes of bradykinin receptors, what receptor type are they, and what is their key difference?

A

GPCRs
B1 - no internalisation - resistant to desensitisation
B2 - internalisation - desensitise

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14
Q

What breaks down bradykinin?

A

Peptidase

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15
Q

What causes angioedema?

A

Drug-induced - ACE inhibitors prevent bradykinin breakdown - swelling
Hereditary - C1 inhibitor missing - no bradykinin regulation - swelling

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16
Q

Which enzyme converts arachidonic acid to prostaglandins?

A

Cyclooxygenase

17
Q

How do NSAIDs work?

A

Inhibit cyclooxygenase

18
Q

What are the types of cyclooxygenase and what are their actions?

A

COX-1 - constitutive - gastric protection

COX-2 - induced at inflammation site - causes inflammation and cardiovascular protection

19
Q

What is the key difference between new and old NSAIDs?

A

Old non-selective - cause GI tract ulcers

New selective for COX-2 - no GI tract ulcers - inhibits cardiovascular protective role - cardiovascular side effects

20
Q

What is the mechanism of glucocorticoids in the HPA axis?

A

Hypothalamus releases corticotropin releasing factor (CRF) - onto anterior pituitary
Anterior pituitary releases adrenocorticotrophic hormone (ACTH) onto adrenal cortex
Adrenal cortex releases glucocorticoids - inhibit hypothalamus

21
Q

What is the role of glucocorticoids?

A

Inhibit inflammatory mediators - anti-inflammatory

22
Q

What are the individual inhibitory actions of glucocorticoids?

A

Neutrophil migration
Neutrophil and macrophage activation
T-lymphocyte activation and clonal expansion

23
Q

What is Cushing’s syndrome and what is its treatment?

A

Excessive ACTH - adrenal cortex produces excess cortisol
Glucocorticoids as treatment - inhibit ACTH production - adrenal glands shrink - withdrawing treatment prevents adrenaline production - adrenaline crisis - must be weaned off treatment

24
Q

What are biologics?

A

Biomolecules that target inflammatory mediators

25
Q

Name a cytokine and describe its roles

A

Tumour necrosis factor (TNF) alpha

Causes fever, activates macrophages