Acute inflammatory response Flashcards
immunity
“protection from infection or disease”
But includes autoimmunity where the target = one’s own tissues
failure of immunity
results in symptoms
infection
microbes colonising a host
inflammation
Part of immunity and stimulated by infection and other injury
chemical mediators
leucocytes
tissue cells
microvasculature
plasma precursors
nerves
what are the 4 cardinal signs of inflammation?
- heat and redness
- swelling
- pain
- loss of function
heat + redness
Arteriolar dilation
Increased blood flow to inflamed tissue
swelling
Leakage of plasma + WBCs from blood vessels into tissue (plasma extravasation)
pain
external physical or chemical injury = endogenous generation of chemical mediators of inflammation
loss of function
tissue re-modelling + destruction
fibrin deposition (scarring)
Only occurs in chronic inflammation -> source isn’t removed
Cellular components of inflammatory response - leucocytes (WBCs)
Granulocytes (polymorphonuclear leukocytes, PMNs)
- Neutrophils
- Eosinophils
- Basophils
Lymphocytes
- T, B cells, NK
Monocytes
Cellular components of inflammatory response - tissue mast cells
Type 1 immediate hypersensitivity via IgE
Endothelium
NO causes arteriolar dilation
Endothelial contraction makes venules leaky - Increased permeability (increased gap)
= OEDEMA (swelling)
difference between chemical mediators of inflammation and antibodies?
chemical mediators have low specificity
triple response
- Redness due to vasodilation (arterioles)
- Flare
- Activation of sensory nerves
- Pain and itch
- Neuropeptide release
- Swelling