Host response Flashcards

1
Q

Continuum of wound healing

A
  • Injury
  • Acute inflammation
  • Chronic inflammation
  • Granulation tissue
  • Foreign body reaction
  • Fibrous encapsulation
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2
Q

Inflammation def and steps

A

Inflammation is a complex reaction of the innate immune system involving vascularized tissue

What actually happens:
1.Increased vascular permeability
2.Infiltration of blood plasma proteins and leukocytes 3.Opsonization and phagocytosis of foreign material

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3
Q

Inflammation symptoms

A

Symptoms:
1.Swelling, edema
2.Heat
3.Pain
4. Redness

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4
Q

Acute vs chronic inflammation

A

Acute inflammation: occurs immediately after injury in the first few hours post assault
* Process designed to exit the body from hemostasis

Chronic inflammation: changes that occur in the weeks to months following injury
* Involves components of the coagulation cascade, complement, and lymphocytes

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5
Q

Innate vs aquired immunity

A
  • Innate (non specific) immunity: first line of defense against foreign pathogens - born with these defenses
  • Acquired (specific) immune response: targets specific diseases and pathogens - this ability is acquired through vaccinations and/or exposure to pathogens, the body then remembers these targets
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6
Q

Innate versus adaptive immune system

A

Innate immune system: non-specific, no memory, first line of defense against foreign pathogens
* Hypothesized that this part of the immune system evolved first, found in plants and animals

Adaptive immune system: specific, involves highly specialized, systemic cells and processes that prevent pathogenic growth
* provides the ability to recognize and remember specific pathogen (found in vertebrates)

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7
Q

Sources of innate immunity

A
  • Anatomic barriers (skin and mucous membranes)
  • Physiologic barriers (body temperature, pH)
  • Phagocytic cells (granulocytes)
  • Inflammation
  • These occur in combination
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8
Q

Antibody

A
  • Antibody: a large Y-shaped protein produced by B-cells that is used by the immune system to identify and neutralize foreign objects such as bacteria and viruses.
  • Also called immunoglobulins (Ig)
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9
Q

Opsonin

A
  • An opsonin is any molecule that targets an antigen for an immune response. However, the term is usually used in reference to molecules that act as a binding enhancer for the process of phagocytosis (cellular uptake of solid particles)
  • Antibodies: IgG and IgM (Adaptive)
  • Components of the complement system: C3b, C4b, and iC3b (Innate) * Mannose-binding lectin (initiates the formation of C3b) (Innate)
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10
Q

Complement system

A
  • The complement system helps or “complements” the ability of antibodies and phagocytic cells to clear pathogens from an organism.
  • It is part of the immune system called the innate immune system that is not adaptable and does not change over the course of an individual’s lifetime.
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11
Q

General features of the complement system

A

AMPLIFICATION: multi-component system involving sequential proteolysis of protein to generate a protease (zymogen cascade)
SOLID-STATE: multiprotein complex remains bound to target, increases local protein concentration
SOLUBLE SIGNALS: cleaved fragments act as signaling molecules to enhance and regulate inflammation
MULTIPLE INHIBITORS: host cells contain numerous complement inhibitors, inhibitors also present in circulating serum

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12
Q

Complement disorders

A

complement deficiencies -> recurring bacterial infection.

improper resolution, over-activation, loss of complement regulators -> inflammatory disorders

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13
Q

Result after severe burns

A
  • Skin is damaged – easier for pathogens to enter the body
    • Often develop sepsis – infection of the body which can progress to severe
      sepsis followed by septic shock (can be lethal)
    • Overactivation of the immune system and coagulation cascade leads to lack of blood flow and clots
  • The components of the immune system can be overwhelmed – infection spreads
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14
Q

What is the central element of both complement pathways

A

Proteolysis of C3, most abundant complement protein

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15
Q

Alternative complement pathway

A

Components of the alterative pathway are abundant in serum

At a wound site, abundant complement proteins are available rapidly

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16
Q

Lectin pathway

A

Lectin Pathway (newest pathway to be discovered):
* homologous to the classical pathway, but with the opsonin, mannose- binding lectin (MBL), and ficolins
* lectins are proteins that bind sugars

17
Q

Complement regulation

A
  • Complement regulatory proteins – soluble and membrane bound
  • Importance of rapid regulation of complement – soluble inhibitors abundant in serum
  • Cleaved products are normally only reactive for brief periods – ensures
    limited diffusion and local concentration