Chronic Inflammation Flashcards
(14 cards)
1
Q
5 Major Cell Types Involved
A
- Monocytes/Macrophages
- Largest WBCs, non-central nucleus, grey-blue vacuoles
- Function - phagocytosis
- Attracted to site by chemostatic stimuli
- Lymphocytes
- Smallest WBCs, small round nuclei and dense chromatin, some basophilic cytoplasm
- Can also see T cells (thymus derived) and B cells (bone marrow derived) occasionally
- Function - components of cell-mediated immune response and anti-body immune response
- Plasma Cells
- Small/intermediate size, clock face chromatin, perinucelear hof (prominent Golgi)
- Function - derived from activated B cells - make 1 specific antibody
- Eosinophils
- Small granulocytes, bi-lobed nucleus and bright red eosin granules (BASIC)
- Function- important in response to parasitic infections and IgE-mediated allergic reactions
- Activated and recruited by eotaxin
- Mast Cells
- Part of Type I immediate hypersensitivity reaction
- Have cell surface receptors that bind Fc of IgE antibody (associated w/ anaphylactic reactions)
- Release histamine (vasoactive amine) and prostaglandins
2
Q
2 Types of Macrophage Activation
A
- 1- Classical - main goal is to kill microbes; induce by microbial products; produce ROS and NO + up regulate lysosomal enzymes to inc ability to kill and secreted cytokines
- 2- Alternative- main goal is tissue repair; induced by cytokine IL-3 and IL-4 (made by T cells); secrete growth factors and cytokines to induce angiogenesis, fibroblast activation and collagen synthesis
3
Q
Relationship Between T Cells and Macrophages
A
- Macrophages present antigens to T cells yet T cells secrete cytokines that active macrophages
- TH1 - activates classical macrophage activation
- TH2- activates alternative path of macrophage activation
4
Q
Reticuloendothelial System
A
- Monocytes made in bone marrow then circulate in blood; migrate to tissues and become macrophages;
- Stimulated for migration by cytokines, growth factors, fragments of collagen breakdown and fibronectin and fibropeptides
- Activated by IFN-gamma (cytokine), bacterial endotoxins, chemical mediators
- Morphological changes- inc in cells size, inc proteolytic enzymes/metabolism, inc ability to phagocytose and kill microbes
- Phagocytosis
- 1- recognition and attachment to particle to be ingested
- 2- engulfment -form phagocytic vacuole
- 3- kill/degrade ingested material
5
Q
4 Things Macrophages Produce
A
- ROS and NO (reactive nitrogen species) - toxic to microbes
- Proteases/lysosomal enzymes - toxic to mcirobes
- Cytokines/chemokines
- Ex) TGF-beta - MOST IMPORTANT IN DEPOSITION OF PROTEINS AND FIBROSIS (healing); stimulate fibroblast migration and proliferation, inc collagen synthesis, breakdown ECM (TIMPs)
- Growth factors and chemical mediators of fibrosis and angiogenesis
6
Q
Lymphocytic Thyroiditis (Hashimoto’s thyroiditis)
A
- chronic inflammation w/in thyroid w/ plasma cells (can test for antibodies)
7
Q
Inflammatory Bowel Disease and Chron’s
A
- Chronic inflammation in lower GI tract —> fibrosis (strictures) and ulceration or fistula formation; malignancy
8
Q
Pelvic Inflammatory Disease
A
- Usually from ascending infection (enteric bacteria, Chlamydia, Gonorrhea) into upper female genital tract
- Can have devastating complications (peritonitis, adhesions, bacteremia, infertility)
9
Q
Granulomatous Inflammation
A
- Pattern of chronic inflammation; hallmark= local collection of activated epithelial-like macrophages
- Involved multi-nucleated giant cells (MNGCs)
10
Q
2 Types of Multinucleated Giant Cells
A
- 1- Foreign Body Type - scattered nuclei
- 2- Langhans Type - horseshoe-arranged nuclei; peripherally arranged
11
Q
What is a granuloma? 2 Types
A
- Granuloma = focal aggregate of activated macrophages, lymphocytes and sometimes plasma cells, necrotic debris, usually MNGCs; can develop rim of fibroblasts and connective tissue over time
- 1- Foreign Body Type - arises from persistent material that is too large/indigestible for clearance
-
2- Immune Type - arises from insoluble/persistent antigen that induces cell-mediated immune reaction (ex- tuberculosis)
12
Q
Chronic Granulomatous Disease
A
- Hereditary immunodef - macrophages cannot make ROS (defect in gene encoding NADPH Oxidase - makes superoxide anion) - so macrophages cannot digest pathogen —> infection granuloma forms
- Can diagnose b/c lack of superoxide prevents NBT reagent from changing color
13
Q
Pulmonary Alveolar Peritonitis
A
- Accumulate surfactant b/c macrophage defect prevents alveolar macrophages from being able to clear surfactant (caused by either mutation or auto-antibodies against GM-CSF)
- Use bronchoalveolar lavage - diagnose and relieve
- Can diagnose via serological analysis of fluid (sandy-colored and opaque); GM-CSF autoantibodies
14
Q
TGF-alpha v TGF-beta
A
TGF-alpha attracts macrophages
THEN TGF-beta released by macrophages to activate fibroblasts (fibrosis) and breakdown inhibited by TIMPs
(ALPHA BEFORE BETA)