3. Chronic inflammation - diseases Flashcards

1
Q

What are the possible complications of chronic inflammation?

A
  1. fibrosis
  2. impaired function (often secondary to fibrosis)
  3. increased function - rare
  4. atrophy
  5. stimulation of immune response (macrophage - lymphocyte interaction)
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2
Q

Give an example of chronic inflammation associated with increased function.

A

Thyrotoxicosis - overproduction of thyroxine - in Graves’ disease (autoantibodies against TSH receptors)

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3
Q

Give an example of chronic inflammation leading to tissue atrophy.

A

Pernicious anaemia: gastric autoimmune disease (antibodies to parietal cells and intrinsic factor)… causes destruction of gastric mucosa.

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4
Q

what is chronic cholecystitis and how is it caused

A
  • chronic inflammation of gallbladder common bile duct
  • due to repeated obstruction by gallstones
  • causing fibrosis of gallbladder wall
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5
Q

what is chronic gastritis and how is it caused

A

chronic inflammation of gastric mucosa caused by infection with Helicobacter pylori

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6
Q

how does H. pylori cause chronic gastritis

A
  1. directly damages epithelial cells
  2. stimulates production of pro-inflammatory cytokines
  3. increases acid secretion
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7
Q

describe the microscopic features of chronic gastritis

A
  1. presence of H. pylori organisms
  2. mucosa chronic inflammation: in superficial epithelium and lamina propria
  3. lamina propria fibrosis
  4. mucosal atrophy
  5. intestinal metaplasia
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8
Q

which malignancies are associated with H. pylori gastritis

A

1- gastric adenocarcinoma

2- MALT lymphoma

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9
Q

which cell type does Mtb initially infect and how does it survive

A

i) Mtb enters macrophages by endocytosis… replicates within phagosome - blocks phagolysosome fusion.
ii) proliferates in pulmonary alveolar macrophages and airspaces… bacteraemia… seeding of multiple sites (asymptomatic or mild flu-like illness)

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10
Q

describe the immune response against Mtb infection

A

i) 3 wks after infection: T helper cell response against Mtb is mounted - produce IFNy… activates macrophages to become bactericidal… produce TNF.
ii) recruits monocytes with differentiate into epithelioid histiocytes… granuloma formaiton - contains illness in many.
iii) in some, infection progresses - immune response results in tissue destruction due to caseation and cavitation.

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11
Q

what is the main microscopic feature of TB

A

tuberculous granuloma consisting of central caseous necrosis and Langhans giant cells

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12
Q

what is the main macroscopic feature of TB

A
  • GHON FOCUS (calcified tuberculous granuloma in lung)

- contained in a GHON COMPLEX (ghon focus + granulomas in hilar lymph node)

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13
Q

what is a ranke complex

A

seen in healed primary TB - comprises a ghon focus and ipsilateral calcified hilar node

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14
Q

what is miliary tuberculosis

A

disseminated TB throughout body (e.g. lungs, liver and spleen) resulting in small lesions esp. seen on chest x-ray

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15
Q

what is Pott’s disease

A

TB in vertebrae

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16
Q

what is scrofula

A

TB in cervical region

17
Q

what is sarcoidosis

A

autoimmune condition causing granuloma formation in various organs, esp. lungs and skin

18
Q

how is TB differentiated from sarcoidosis

A

TB

  • caseous granuloma
  • langhans giant cells
  • X-ray to show Ghon lesions
  • Acid-fast stain shows acid-fact bacilli

sarcoidosis

  • non-caseating granuloma
  • Langhans giant cells
  • blood tests show high Ca2+ and high ACE levels
19
Q

what is liver cirrhosis

A

chronic liver inflammation associated with fibrosis… architecture disorganisation and attempted regeneration… cirrhosis and impaired function

20
Q

what are the common causes of liver cirrhosis

A
1- alcohol
2- HBV or HCV infection
3- immunological
4- fatty liver disease
5- drugs and toxins
21
Q

name 3 microscopic features of liver cirrhosis

A

1- fibrous CT surrounds regenerative nodules of heptocytes
2- bile duct proliferation
3- lymphocytes