2. Acute Inflammation Flashcards

1
Q

What is inflammation?

A

The response of living tissue to injury.

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2
Q

Why is inflammation needed?

A

To limit tissue damage.

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3
Q

What are some key features of acute inflammation?

A

Innate, immediate and early, stereotyped. Short duration: minutes/hours/a few days.

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4
Q

What are some causes of acute inflammation?

A

Microbial infections, hypersensitivity reactions, physical agents, chemicals and tissue necrosis.

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5
Q

What are the clinical features of acute inflammation?

A

Rubor (redness), tumor (swelling), calor (heat), dolor (pain_. Leads to loss of function, protective mechanism.

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6
Q

How does acute inflammation change tissues?

A

Changes in blood flow, exudation of fluid into tissues, infiltration of inflammatory cells.

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7
Q

How does blood flow change in acute inflammation?

A

Transient vasoconstriction of arterioles, then vasodilatation of arterioles then capillaries - increases blood flow causing calor and rubor. Blood vessels get more permeable so there’s exudation of fluid into tissues and slowing of circulation from swelling.

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8
Q

What chemical mediators are present in the immediate early response?

A

Histamine, released from mast cells, basophils and platelets. Response to many stimuli.

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9
Q

What does histamine cause?

A

Vascular dilatation, transient increase in vascular permeability, and pain.

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10
Q

What is Starlings Law of fluid loss?

A

Fluid flow across vessel walls is determined by the balance of hydrostatic and colloid osmotic pressure comparing plasma and interstitial fluid.
Increased hydrostatic pressure -> increased fluid flow out of vessel.
Increased osmotic pressure of interstitium -> increase fluid flow out of vessel.

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11
Q

How does acute inflammation cause oedema?

A

Arteriolar dilatation leads to increased hydrostatic pressure, increased permeability of vessel walls leads to loss of protein into interstitium. So net flow of fluid is out of the vessel.

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12
Q

What is oedema?

A

Excess of fluid in interstitium.

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13
Q

What is the difference between oedema in exudate and transudate?

A

Fluid loss in inflammation is exudate, high protein content. Fluid loss due to hydrostatic pressure imbalance only is transudate, low protein content.

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14
Q

What are the mechanisms of vascular leakage?

A

Endothelial contraction -> gaps
Cytoskeletal reorgansation -> gaps
Direct injury, leukocyte depend injury, increased transcytosis.

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15
Q

What is the key cell type involved in acute inflammation?

A

Neutrophils.

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16
Q

How do neutrophils infiltrate in acute inflammation?

A

Margination - line up at the edge of the bleed vessels along the endothelium.
Rolling - roll along endothelium, stick to it intermittently,
Adhesion - stick more avidly.
Emigration - through blood vessel wall.

17
Q

How do neutrophils escape from vessels?

A

Relaxation of inter-endothelial cell junctions, digestion of vascular basement membrane and movement.

18
Q

What is chemotaxis?

A

Movement along concentration gradients of chemoattractants.

19
Q

What is the role of neutrophils in acute inflammation?

A

Phagocytosis. Contact, recognise and internalise the debris.

20
Q

What is neutrophil action facilitated by?

A

Opsonins.

21
Q

What are the two types of killing mechanisms?

A

O2 dependent - produce superoxide and hydrogen peroxide.

O2 independent - lysozyme and hydrolases.

22
Q

What are some chemical mediators of acute inflammation?

A

Proteases - plasma proteins, produced in the liver.
Prostaglandins/leukotrienes - metabolites of arachidonic acid, increases blood flow.
Cytokines/chemokines - many and varied.

23
Q

How does exudation of fluid combat injury?

A

Delivers plasma proteins to area of injury (immunoglobulins, inflammatory mediators, and fibrinogen), dilutes toxins, increases lymphatic drainage (delivers micro-organisms to phagocytes and antigens to immune system).

24
Q

How does infiltration of cells combat injury?

A

Removes pathogenic organisms, necrotic debris.

25
Q

How does vasodilatation combat injury?

A

Increases delivery, increases temperature.

26
Q

How does pain and loss of function combat injury?

A

Enforces rest, reduces chance of further traumatic damage.

27
Q

What are some local complications of acute inflammation?

A

Swelling - blocks tubes. Exudate - compression and serositis. Loss of fluid, pain and loss of function.

28
Q

What are some systemic effects of acute inflammation?

A

Fever, leukocytosis, acute phase response (loss of appetite, raised pulse rate etc.), and acute phase proteins concentration rise.

29
Q

What is shock?

A

When the body is overwhelmed by acute inflammation?

30
Q

What are the possible results of acute inflammation?

A

Complete resolution, continues acute inflammation with chronic inflammation (abscess), chronic inflammation and fibrous repair, death.

31
Q

What happens in resolution of acute inflammation morphologically?

A

Changes gradually reverse, and vascular changes stop.

32
Q

What happens to cell mediators of acute inflammation in resolution?

A

Mediators have short half-lives. May be inactivated by degradation, inhibitors can binds. May be unstable or diluted. Specific inhibitors of acute inflammatory changes.

33
Q

What are some disorders of acute inflammation?

A

Herediatry angio-oedma, alpha 1-antitrypsin deficiency, inherited complement deficiences, defects in neutrophil function, defects in neutrophil numbers.