Chronic Inflammation Flashcards
Chronic characterization
Lymphocytes (B and T cells) and macrophages
Proliferating blood vessels
Formation of connective tissue
Signature cell of chronic inflammation
M1 macrophages: associated with high levels of pro-inflammatory cytokines
Activated by INF-gamma and microbes
Hepcidin
Increases iron accumulation in macrophages and decreases iron absorption in the gut
Decreases the amount of iron in the blood so invading bugs cannot use it
M2 macrophages
Activated by IL-13 and IL-4
Shut down immune response, start healing (tissue repair, fibrosis)
Granulomatous inflammation
Associated with persistent T-cell activation
IL-2 feedback loop
“Frustrated macrophages” wall off the invader
Common with persistent microbial intracellular infection
Caseous, necrotizing granuloma (cheesy appearance)
Activated macrophages and mutinucleated giant cells in the periphery
Biochemical changes in inflammation
Increased hepatic production: fibrinogen (coagulation cascade), ceruloplasmin (copper regulation), complement components (C3)
Decreased albumin synthesis
Increased hepcidin (causing anemia)
Growth factors (stimulating marrow)
C-reactive protein (CRP)
Stimulated by inflammation, linked to IL-6 levels
Used in quantification fashion for determining level of inflammation
Obesity can cause a false elevation of CRP
Erythrocyte sedimentation rate (ESR)
Chronic inflammation causes increase in IgG and fibrinogen, which coat RBCs
The RBCs will fall more rapidly through column