what is acute mastitis?
sudden dysfunction/inflammation of the mammary gland by bacteria, accompanied by swelling, heat, and obvious pain and discomfort for the cow. The halmark diagnostic feature of acute mastitis is the presence of leukocytes in the milk
what is the economic importance of bovine mastitis?
lower milk production
what is the farm-side test to test for bovine mastitis?
California Mastitis test. higher levels of agglutination means more inflammation
what are the five steps of acute inflammation?
what are the cardinal signs of acute inflammation?
redness (rubor), heat (calor), swelling (tumor), pain (dolor), and loss of function (functio laesa)
the most common initiator of acute inflammation is:
sentinel cell detection of microbial or parasitic products within host tissues
Name a few triggers of inflammation:
trauma, physical and chemical injury, foreign bodies, inappropriate products of adaptive immunity
many of the triggers of inflammation release ___
DAMPs, which, although endogenously derived, can lead to activation of macrophages
activation of macrophages with PAMPs and DAMPs is indicative of:
infection and tissue injury
PAMPs and DAMPs activate inflammasomes within macrophages, leading to the release of:
interleukins (proinflammatory cytokines) and lipid mediators
give 4 examples of mediators for local vascular changes:
These mediators change the vascular permeability and expand the capillary beds to slow down the blood velocity for leukocytes to have more opportunity to stop the pathogen
Histamine is released from the granules of Mast Cells adjacient to blood vessels. This release is induced by:
-trauma/cold/heat
- immune reactions (IgE)
- C3a, C5a
- histamine releasing proteins from leukocytes
- neuropeptidies (substanceP)
- cytokines (IL1, IL8)
histamine binds to __ receptors on endothelial cells and causes ____
1) H1 receptors
2) dilation of arterioles and increased permeability of venules
nitric oxide (NO) is released from endothelial cells and macrophages. it induces:
relaxation of vascular smooth muscle, leading to vasodilation and increased vascular permeability
in the short term, NO is proinflammatory, as it leads to vasodilation. in the long term, it reduces leukocyte recruitment, and therefore plays an _____ role
anti-inflammatory
Leukotrienes and Prostaglandins are both local vascular mediators. How do they differ in their mechanism of action?
Both increase vascular permeability. Leukotrienes stimulate smooth muscle contraction and neutrophil chemotaxis, and prostaglandins induce vasodilation and hyperalgesia
How do NSAIDS stimulate an antiinflammatory response?
NSAIDs prevent arachidonic acid from converting into prostaglandins by inhibiting the enzymes (COX1 and 2) that catalyze the reaction.
NOTE: prostaglandins are local vascular mediators that stimulate an inflammatory response
What are NSAIDs?
Non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs. They are cox 1/2 inhibitors that serve local anti-inflammatory and analgesic effects, as well as serving a central anti-pyretic effect
Cytokines and chemokines (IL-1B, IL-6, TNF-a, IL-8) serve as inflammatory mediators by:
activating leukocytes and endothelial cells, causing systemic reactions. Chemokines in particular activate chemotaxis
what are 4 consequences of vasodilation?
what are the three predominant mediators of vasodilation in the inflammatory response?
what are four consequences of increased vascular permeability?
increased vascular permeability is primary mediated by what three molecules?
Histamine
Leukotrienes
Prostaglandins
what does vasodilation and increased permeability (fluid loss) result in?
Local stasis of blood flow (AKA decreased blood velocity)