Cell inflammation Flashcards

1
Q

What is inflammation?

A

Non-specific response to cellular injury
Removes the cause and consequence of injury
A universal process occurs in most diseases

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2
Q

What are the 4 main signs of acute inflammation?

A
Swelling
Heat
Redness
Pain
(loss of function)
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3
Q

What causes inflammation?

A
Pathogens
Allergens
Auto-antigens
Physical damage
Extreme temperatures
Non-apoptotic cell death
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4
Q

What is acute inflammation?

A

Rapid repose non-specific response to cellular injury

Applies to any viable, vascularised tissue

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5
Q

What happens during inflammation?

A

Change in local blood flow
Structural changes in the microvasculature
Recruitment?accumulation of immune cells and proteins

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6
Q

What happens when the tissue is damaged?

A
Inflammatory signals
Vasodilators released
-histamine
-nitric oxide
Vascular changes 
- increased permeability
-dilation
-reduced flow 
-plasma oxide
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7
Q

What benefits does increased vascular permeability and leakage bring?

A

Increased antibodies
Increased protein
Increased barrier
Increased Leukocyte migration

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8
Q

What is exudate?

A

Fluid, proteins and cells that have seeped out of a blood vessel
Acts as barrier

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9
Q

What happens during immune cell recruitment?

A

Chemokines produced diffuse out forming gradient

Leukocytes expressing complementary chemokine receptors migrate towards the chemokine source

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10
Q

What are the 4 steps of neutrophil extravasation?

A

Chemo-attraction
Rolling adhesion
Tight-adhesion
Transmigration (neurophil swarming)

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11
Q

What do neutrophils do at the site of inflammation?

A
Pathogen recognition
Pathogen Clearance 
-Phagocytosis 
- Netosis
Cytokine secretion
-recruitment and activation of other immune cells
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12
Q

How is acute inflammation resolved?

A
Pathogen recognition
Neutrophils have a short half life
Macrophages 
-clear apoptotic cells 
-produce anti-inflammatory mediators
Mainly self-regualting
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13
Q

Name some diseases characterised by chronicle inflammation?

A
Arthritis
Asthma
Hepatitis
Multiple Sclerosis
Psoriasis
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14
Q

Name some diseases associated with granulomatous inflammation?

A

TB
Leprosy
Crohn’s disease

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15
Q

What is chronic inflammation?

A

Similar to acute but there is persistent inflammatory stimuli
e.g infection or toxic stimuli

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16
Q

What does persistent stimuli cause?

A
Distinct immune cells infiltrate
-Macrophages
-T cells
-Plasma cells 
A vicious cycle 
-bystander tissue destruction
-concurrent repaint processes
17
Q

What is the role of macrophages in inflammation?

A
Recruited as monocytes to the sire of inflammation 
Phagocytic- clear cellular debris
Cytotoxic
Anti-inflammatory
Wound repair
18
Q

Why can macrophages cause harm?

A

Cytotoxic- don’t only kill pathogen but surrounding cells
Inflammatory
Pro-fibrotic- can cause permanent damage to tissue function

19
Q

What is the role of T-lymphocytes?

A

Pro-inflammatory- clear infection well
Cytotoxic- don’t damage surrounding tissues
Regulatory

20
Q

What is the role of B-lymphocytes?

A

Generate plasma cells that secrete antibodies
Protective- clear infection
Inflammatory- driving reactions against self
Can be local or operate remotely

21
Q

What is granulomatous inflammation?

A

Chronic inflammation with distinct pattern of granuloma formation
Trigged by a strong T-cell response

22
Q

What is the characteristic circular space in granulomatous inflammation?

A

Aggregation of activated macrophages

A barrier defined for clearance

23
Q

What are the outcomes of acute inflammation?

A

Clear inflammatory agents
Remove damaged cells
Restore normal tissue function

24
Q

What are the outcomes of chronic inflammation?

A

Excess tissue damage
Scarring
Loss of organ function- organ failure

25
Q

What does wound healing lead to?

A

Extra-cellular matriculates deposition

26
Q

What are the consequences of inflammation?

A

Broncho-pneumonia
Scarring
Can lead to loss of function in tissues