Chronic Inflammation Flashcards

1
Q

What are the characteristics of acute inflammation?

A
  • Rapid, stereotyped response of living tissue to any injury.
  • Macroscopic: redness, swelling, heat, pain and loss of function
  • Microscopic: Vascular dilatation, exudate leaks into tissues, neutrophils emigrate.
  • Changes controlled by many short-lived chemical mediators
  • Neutrophils: Fast acting. short-lived phagocytes, engulf and degrate bacteria, dead tossue ect..
  • Phagocytosis enhanced by opsonisation
  • Bacterial killing largely oxygen dependant
  • Defects in the system lead to severe susceptibility to infection.
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2
Q

What is chronic inflammation?

A

A chronic response to injury with associated fibrosis.

Less is known when compared to acute inflammation, and it overlaps with host immunity.

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3
Q

How does chronic inflammation arise?

A
  1. May ‘take over’ from acute inflammation

if damage is too severe to be resolved within a few days.

  1. My arise de novo This occurs in:
    - autoimmune conditions (RA)
    - Some chromic infections (viral hepatitis)
    - Chronic low-level irritation.
  2. May develop alongside acute inflammation

in severe persistent or repeated irritation.

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4
Q

What does chronic inflammation look like?

A
  • Characterised by the microscopic appearances which are much more variable thank acute inflammation.
  • Most important characteristic is the types of cell present. Inc. Macrophages, Lymphocytes Plasma cells, Eosinophils, Fibroblasts / myofibroblasts and Giant cells.
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5
Q

WHat are macrophages derived from?

A

Macrophages are derived form blood monocytes. They are called monocytes when circulating and macrophages in tissues.

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6
Q

What are the functions of macrophages?

A

They are important in acute and chronic inflammation.

They’re have various levels of activation.

Functions:

  • Phagocytosis and destruction of debris and bacteria.
  • Processing and presenting antigens to the immune system.
  • Synthesis of not only cytokines but also complement proteins, blood clotting factors and proteases.
  • Control of other cells by cytokine release.
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7
Q

What are lymphocytes often called?

A

Chronic inflammations cells (but this isnt an acurate name as they are a nrmal component of many tissues)

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8
Q

What are the functions of lymphocytes?

A
  • Complex and mainly immunological
  • B lymphocytes differentiate to produce antibodies.
  • T lymphocytes involved in control and some cytotoxic functions.
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9
Q

What other cells (not macrophages and lymphocytes) are involved in chronic inflammation? What are their roles?

A

Plasma cells - differentiated antibody-producing B lymphocytes. Usually implies considerable chronicity.

Eosinophils - Allergic reactions, parasite infestations, some tumours. (sunburnt face with shades on)

Fibroblasts / Myofibroblasts - recruited by macrophages; make collagen.

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10
Q

What are giant cells?

A

They are multinucleate cells made by the fusion of macrophages.

Frustrated phagocytosis (all combine together to undergo phagocytosis.)

Several types recognised:

Langhans - TB

Foreign body type - foreign material

Touton - Fat necrosis

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11
Q

How do the proportions of each cell change in chronic inflammation of different diseases? RA? Chronic Gastritis? Leishmaniasis?

A

Rheumatoid Arthritis: Mainly Plasma cells.

Chronis gastrits: Mainly lymphocytes

Leishmaniasis (a protozoal infection): mainly macrophages

Giant cell type may be a help to diagnosis

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12
Q

What are the effects of chronic inflammation?

A

Fibrosis (scarring) eg gall bladder (chronic cholecystitis), chronic peptic ulcers, cirrhosis.

Impaired function eg chronic inflamatiory bowel disease

  • rarely increased fuction eg mucus secretion.

Atrophy - gastric mucosa, adrenal glands

Stimulation of an immune response - macrophage - lymphocyte interactions.

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13
Q

What is chronic cholecystitis?

A

Gall stones getting stuck or eroding the mucosa. It leads to a thick, fibrotic wall. This is repeated attacks of acute inflamation usually initiated by gall stones h=which leads to chronic inflamation.

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14
Q

What is inflammatory bowel diesease?

A

Inflammatory Bowel Disease is a family of idiopathic diseases affecting the large bowel.

Patients present with diarrhoea, rectal bleeding and other symptoms.

Ulcerative colitis (superficial- diarrhoea and bleeding) and Crohn’s disease (transmural (through thickness of bowel wall) - strictures (narrowing) and fistulae (normal connection between two epithelium-lined organs)).

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15
Q

What are the causes of cirrhosis?

A

Alcohol,

Infection (HBV, HVC)

Immunological,

Fatty liver disease,

Drugs and toxins.

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16
Q

What leads to cirrhosis?

A

Chronic inflammation with fibrosis (disorganisation of architecture, attempted regeneration) leads to cirrhosis which is irreversible.

17
Q

Graves?

A

Autoimmune disease caused by antibodies which are produced by plasma cells and bind to the TSH receptor. This stimutaes the release of T3 and T4.

18
Q

What is gastric mucosa atrophy?

A

Atrophic gastritisis a process of chronic inflammation of the stomach mucosa, leading to loss of gastric glandular cells and their eventual replacement by intestinal and fibrous tissues. As a result, the stomach’s secretion of essential substances such as hydrochloric acid, pepsin, and intrinsic factor is impaired, leading to digestive problems. It is an autoimmune condition.

19
Q

What is the link between chronic inflammation and immune response?

A

Chronic inflammation and immune responses overlap.

  • Immune diseases cause pathology by chronic inflammation.
  • Chronic inflammatory processes can stimulate an immune response.
20
Q

What is granullomous inflammation?

A

Chronic inflammation with granulomas!

21
Q

What is a granuloma?

A

Macrophages that stick together like epithelium. Also with lymphocytes.

“a granuloma is an organized collection of macrophages.”

22
Q

How do granulomas arise?

A

Persistent, low grade antigenic stimulation.

Hypersensitivity. (Immune reactions that result in damage to the body).

23
Q

What are the main causes of granulomatous inflammation?

A

Mildly irritant ‘foreign’ material.

Infections

  • Mycobacteria: TB, leprosy
  • Other infections eg some fungi

Unknown causes (Idiopathic)

  • Sarcoidosis (common)
  • Wagner’s granulomatosis (rare)
  • Crohn’s disease
24
Q

What is TB?

A

Caused by mycobacteria

-especillly M. Tuberculosis.

Difficult and slow to culture.

Nature of organism: see microbiologists

-n.b. wall lipids (mycosides)

Toxins or lyric enzymes

-Causes disease by persistence and induction of cell mediated immunity.

Cough up blood (inflammation in lungs) and scarring - it is the bodies reaction to the organism that causes the symptoms.

25
Q

What are the features of TB granulomas?

A

Cause Caseous necrosis

Giant cells (Langhans cells)

Epitheliod histocytes (macrophages) and lymphocytes.

26
Q

What granulomas diseases have unknown causes?

A

Sarcoidosis

  • Variable clinical manifestation
  • Young adult women
  • Non-caseating granulomas, giant cells, involves lymph nodes, lungs.
  • Can be progressive.. if in the liver, it can lead to cirrhosis which is irreversible.

Crohn’s disease

  • Regional enteritis’ :patchy full-thickness Inflamation throughout the bowel (anywhere)

Wagner’s

  • Most commonly affect the kidney. Most commonly treat by immunosuppression.