Acute Inflammation Flashcards
Define acute inflammation
Rapid response to injury that resolves quickly
What are the 3 main processes involved in acute inflammation?
- vascular changes + formation of exudate
- activation of endothelial cells and release of mediators
- cellular changes including activation of neutrophils
Describe the clinical features of acute inflammation
- redness due to dilatation of small blood vessels
- heat due to increased blood flow and fever
- swelling due to accumulation of fluid in ECM
- pain due to stretching of tissues from oedema and mediators such as bradykinin and serotonin stimulating pain receptors
- loss of function (movement) due to pain and swelling which can immobilise the inflamed area
Describe the vascular changes that occur in acute inflammation
- vasodilation (transient vasoconstriction then vasodilation): starts in arterioles and increases blood flow to affected area as a result of histamine and NO on vascular smooth muscle
- increased vascular permeability due to contraction of endothelial cells: permits escaped protein rich exudate into extra vascular tissue leading to oedema. Mediated by histamine, bradykinin and substance P. Increased inter-endothelial space which allows passage of fluid into ECM
- vascular congestion (stasis): slower flow of blood leading to increased concentration of chemical mediators at site
- endothelial cells activated by mediators produced during inflammation and increased levels of adhesion molecule expression
Describe the cellular process that occurs in acute inflammation
- neutrophil polymorphs migrate to site of inflammation.
- marination occurs where white cells sit more peripherally in blood vessels due to stasis of slow
- cells then roll with white cells sticking and detaching from the vessel wall mediated by selectins
- can be upregulated by IL-1 and TNF
- adhesion then occurs (mediated by integrins and chemokines and stimulated by IL-1 and TNF)
How can the acute response be terminated?
- removal of stimulus
- neutrophils have a short half-life
- variation in cytokine stimuli
- neural impulses
Where are mediators of inflammation synthesised?
In the liver and are activated at the site of inflammation
What forms exudate and its purpose
- water
- proteins (eg. Fibrin)
- inflammatory cells
- allows delivery of nutrients, dilution of toxins and entry of antibodies to stimulate the immune response
List the types of exudate
- fibrinous: rich in fibrin, on serosal surfaces eg. Meninges
- suppurative: pus forming, rich in neutrophil polymorphs eg. Abscesses
- haemorrhagic: severe vascular injury or depletion of coagulation factors
- membranous: epithelium is coated in membrane of fibrin, epithelial cells and inflammatory cells
- pseudomembranous (ulceration): surface exudate on mucosal/epithelial sites eg. C.diff colitis
- necrotising (gangrenous): high tissue pressure leading to vascular occlusion and thrombosis
What are the cells involved in the acute inflammatory response?
- neutrophil polymorphs (phagocytose bacteria)
- macrophages (contain lysosomes, present antigens, phagocytose, synthesise IL-1,6 and TNF)
- complement cascade
- plasma factors (eg. Kinin system, coagulation and fibrinolytic system)
What are the benefits of acute inflammation?
- dilution of toxins by oedema fluid
- increased entry of antibodies and drug transport
- fibrin traps microorganisms
- delivery of nutrients
- stimulation of immune response
What are the detrimental effects of acute inflammation?
- digestion of normal tissue
- swelling (can be life threatening in some locations)
- inappropriate responses
How can infection spread?
- stays local at initial site or may spread to local lymph nodes by draining lymphatics
- haematogenous: through blood/lymph
- can be tracked through tissue to form abscesses/infections elsewhere
What are the clinical signs of acute infection spread?
- increased resp rate
- increased HR
- high or low temp
- high or low WBC count
- check for sepsis/septic shock
What are the possible outcomes of acute inflammation?
- resolution: complete restoration of normal tissue (if minimal damage, in a tissue with regenerative capacity or if cause is rapidly removed/good vascular drainage)
- healing by fibrosis/scarring (if substantial damage to tissue, incapable of regeneration, or abundant fibrin exudate)
- progression to chronic inflammation (if persistent stimulus or tissue destruction leading to ongoing inflammation)