05-10-21 - Acute Inflammation Flashcards
What are the causes of acute inflammation?
What causes are the most common?
- Microbial infection (primary cause)
- Hypersensitivity (allergic) reactions (primary cause)
- Physical agents
- Chemical agents
What are the 5 signs of acute inflammation?
What causes them?
Red (rubor)
• Caused by dilation of blood vessels
Hot (calor)
• Peripheral increase in temperature
• Due to increased blood flow (hyperaemia)
Swollen (tumor)
• Due to mainly oedema (swelling caused by fluid build up)
• Some contribution from inflammatory cells
Painful/tendor (dolor)
• Stimulation of nerve endings by pressure and chemical mediators
Loss of function
What are the 2 initial phases of acute inflammation?
- Vascular phase – dilation and increased permeability
- Exudative phase – fluid and cells escape from permeable venules, with the neutrophil polymorph being the most common cell to leak out
How does dilation occur during the vascular phase? What is it caused by?
- Capillary beds that are mainly empty start to contain blood, cells, and fluid
- This is from the release and activation of the pre-capillary sphincters, which leads to the opening of significant numbers of capillary beds
What causes the increased vascular permeability during the vascular phase?
What happens during this process?
Where does it occur?
- The increase in vascular permeability of the vascular phase is produced by chemical mediators, including histamine and bradykinin
- It involves the stimulation of endothelial cells cytoskeleton by chemical mediators, which causes transient intercellular gaps (between the cells) to appear.
- The endothelial cells are not damaged in this process, just moved slightly
- This increase in vascular permeability is confined to post capillary venules
How does the exudate phase occur in venules?
What would occur normally?
What does the exudate contain?
What is a feature of this exudate?
- During the exudate phase, there is an increase in hydrostatic pressure (outwards), which causes fluid and proteins to be pushed out into the localised damaged tissue surrounding the venules.
- In transudate (normal) circumstances, any outflow of fluid is compensated by inflow of fluid (oncotic pressure)
- The exudate has a high protein content including:
- Immunoglobulins – may be important for destruction of invading organisms
- Fibrinogen – this is used to develop fibrin, which is a protein that forms a mesh that impedes blood flow (clot), which can prevent/ mitigate invasion by pathogens
- Fibrin makes extravascular contact, and is found on the surfaces of acutely inflamed organs
- The exudate has a high turn over rate, and is continuously removed by lymphatics
What conditions are exudate and transudate under?
How do they differ?
Exudate – occurs under acute inflammatory process
• Net flow out of fluid release and proteins
• Increased vascular permeability
• High protein content
Transudate – normal circumstances
• No net flow out
• Normal vascular permeability
• Low protein content
What happens to the lymphatic system during acute inflammation?
What is the role of the lymphatic system in acute inflammation?
What are the conditions involving the lymphatic system can be seen due to acute inflammation?
- The lymphatics become dilated during acute inflammation
- The lymphatics drain the fluid from the exudate
- Antigens are carried to the local lymph nodes
- These antigens can then interact with a wide range of immune cells in the lymph nodes, which can then start to generate an immune response
- Lymphangitis – Inflammation of the lymphatic system
- Lymphadenitis – Inflammation of the local lymph node
What is the diagnostic feature of acute inflammation?
What are the 6 tasks neutrophils can perform?
Why might these be harmful?
What must be able to happen to prevent unnecessary damage?
• Neutrophil accumulation in the extracellular space is the diagnostic feature of acute inflammations
Neutrophils can: • Kill organisms • Degrade necrotic tissue • Ingest offending agents • Produce chemical mediators • Produce toxic radicals to kill foreign bodies • Produce tissue damaging enzymes
If the process of acute inflammation goes on for too long, these functions of neutrophils can result in tissue damage, so the reaction must be able to start and stop. The reaction has to be able to be turned on, aswell as off, in order to prevent unnecessary damage
What is the process that involves neutrophils (and other cells in exudate) moving into the inflamed area around venules?
How does this process occur?
- Neutrophils moving out of the vessels into the inflamed area is caused transmigration
- The vessel wall begins to express certain molecules (expressional proteins, like selectins and integrins), which react with the receptors on the neutrophils cell membrane
- This causes the neutrophils to attach to the venule wall with higher affinity, pavement (flatten), and squeeze through the gaps between the endothelial cells, which were formed in the vascular phase
What is chemotaxis?
What are some compounds for the chemotaxis of neutrophils?
- Chemotaxis is the movement of a motile organism in a direction corresponding to a gradient of increasing or decreasing concentration of a particular substance.
- Chemotactic compounds include:
- Bacterial products
- Some complement components (system of plasma proteins e.x serum proteins)
- Products of neutrophil activity
What are chemical mediators for in acute inflammation?
What are they made from?
What 5 things do they make happen?
- Chemical mediators spread from the injured tissue out into uninjured areas
- These chemical mediators are derived from cells and extracellular resources e.g. plasma
- The chemical mediaotrs cause:
- Increased vascular permeability
- Vasodilation
- Emigration of neutrophils
- Chemotaxis
- Itching and pain.
What are the 4 enzymes cascade systems that plasma contains?
- Complement system
- The kinins
- The coagulation factors
- Fibrinolytic system
What are the 6 roles of neutrophil polymorphs?
What are the 4 steps they use to do this?
How can neutrophils be easily identified?
Neutrophils can: • Kill organisms • Degrade necrotic tissue • Ingest offending agents • Produce chemical mediators • Produce toxic radicals to kill foreign bodies • Produce tissue damaging enzymes
They do this via:
• Movement (chemotaxis)
• Recognition of, and adhesion to micro-organism (opsonins)
• Phagocytosis
• Intracellular killing of micro-organisms
Neutrophils can easily be identified as they contain a mulit-lobe nucleus
What are opsonins?
What are they used for?
How do they work?
What are 3 examples of major opsonins?
- Opsonins are an anti-body, or other substances, which binds to foreign micro-organisms, making them more susceptible to phagocytosis
- Opsonins are complementary in shape to specific receptors on leukocytes (white blood cells), so they increase the chance of phagocytosis occurring
- Major opsonins include:
- Fc fragment of IgC
- C3b fragment of C3
- Collectins (plasma proteins)