Local and Hormonal Mediators Flashcards

1
Q

Where is histamine released from?

A

Granules stored in mast cells - mast cells located in places where body is in contact with the environment

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2
Q

How are mast cells activated?

A

antigen activating IgE, complement cascade (C3a, C5a), neuropeptides, cytokines, chemokines, bacterial components, physical trauma

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3
Q

What are histamine receptors?

A

H1-4 - GPCRs

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4
Q

What are the three responses caused by histamine?

A

reddening (vasodilation), wheal (vascular permeability), flare (spreading through sensory fibres)

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5
Q

What is the action of antihistamines?

A

H1 blockers

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6
Q

When are antihistamines used?

A

In allergic symptoms, adjunct therapy to adrenaline for cardiovascular integrity, and for motion sickness because of actions in the CNS

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7
Q

What is chlorpheniramine?

A

A competitive, reversible H1 receptor antagonist that is sedative

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8
Q

What is promethazine?

A

A competitive, reversible H1 receptor antagonist that is sedative

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9
Q

What is terfenadine?

A

A competitive, reversible H1 receptor antagonist that is non-sedative but may cause sudden ventricular arrhythmia

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10
Q

What is astemizole?

A

A competitive, reversible H1 receptor antagonist that is non-sedative but may cause sudden ventricular arrhythmia

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11
Q

What is cetirizine?

A

A competitive, reverislbe H! receptor antagonist that is non-sedative with fewer risks of unwanted cardiac effects

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12
Q

What is loratidine?

A

A competitive, reversible H1 receptor antagonist that is non-sedative with fewer risks of unwanted cardiac effects

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13
Q

What is the action of H2 receptor antagonists?

A

Regulate stomach acid secretion - originally used to treat peptic ulcers before the discovery of the bacteria causing them

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14
Q

How is bradykinin synthesised?

A

Prekallikrein (an inactive plasma protein) is activated to kallikrein by cleavage by factor XII (hageman factor). Kalikrein then cleaves kininogen in to bradykinin

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15
Q

What size is bradykinin?

A

9 amino acids

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16
Q

How is bradykinin degraded?

A

Kinase II (angiotensin converting enzyme) cleaves off the last two enzymes of bradykinin

17
Q

What are the actions of bradykinin?

A

Vasodilator, increases vascular permeability, pain, contract uterus, airways, gut, epithelial secretion in airways and gut

18
Q

What are the bradykinin receptors?

A

B2 and B1

19
Q

What is icatibant?

A

A selective B2 receptor antagonist for angioedema (a condition where patients produce elevated levels of bradykinin due to C1 esterase inhibitor deficiency)

20
Q

Does acetylcholine cause vasodilation or vasoconstriction?

A

Both - if the endothelium is present it causes vasodilation at a lower concentration and vasoconstriction at a higher concentration, if the endothelium is absent it causes vasoconstriction

21
Q

What is endothelium-derived relaxant factor?

A

NO - this is what makes acetylcholine cause vasodilation when endothelium is present

22
Q

What are endothelium derived vasoactive factors?

A

Factors released from the endothelium which cause relaxation or contraction - e.g. prostacyclin, NO and EDHF cause relaxation and endothelin causes contraction

23
Q

How do ACh and bradykinin receptors cause the generation of NO?

A

Receptor activation and mechanical stress leads to elevation in calcium levels, calcium stimulates NOS, NOS makes NO from arginine, NO diffuses from endothelium to smooth muscle, NO activates guanylate cyclase in smooth muscle which causes synthesis of cGMP - leads to muscle relaxation

24
Q

What are the three isoforms of NOS?

A

nNOS in nerves and epithelial cells, iNOS in macrophages and smooth muscle, eNOS in endothelial cells

25
Q

What is the action of NOS inhibitors?

A

vasoconstriction and hypertension

26
Q

What is L-NAME?

A

N-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester - a NOS inhibitor

27
Q

What is the physiological role of NO?

A

Flow dependent vasodilation, inhibiting platelet adhesion and aggregation, neurotransmitter