Pathology 3 - Acute Inflammation Flashcards
What is the definition of acute inflammation?
“The response of living tissue to injury”.
- innate, immediate, early, stereotyped
- short duration
- initiated to limit the tissue damage
What is acute inflammation generally controlled by?
A variety of chemical mediators derived from plasma or cells
Give some causes of acute inflammation
- microbial infections eg. pyogenic organism
- hypersensitivity reactions
- physical agent (heat, light etc)
- chemicals
- tissue necrosis
What are the main clinical signs of acute inflammation?
Rubor, tumor, calor, dolor, loss of function
What is the general pattern of acute inflammation?
1) changes in blood flow
2) exudation of fluid into tissues
3) infiltration of inflammatory cells
What are the 4 stages of changes in the blood flow during the inflammory response?
- transient vasoconstriction of arterioles
- vasodilatation of arterioles then capillaries, leading to increase in blood flow to area
- increased permeability of blood vessels, leading to exudation of protein-rich fluid into tissues and slowing of circulation
- concentration of RBCs in small vessels and increased viscosity of blood (‘stasis’)
What is histamine released from?
Mast cells, basophils and platelets
What does histamine cause?
Vascular dilatation, transient increase in vascular permeability, pain
True or false - histamine mediates the persistent response?
False - histamine lasts for around half an hour, and is therefore the ‘immediate early response’. The persistent response is controlled by other mediators eg leukotrienes, bradykinin
What does Starling’s Law state?
Fluid flow across vessel walls is determined by the balance of hydrostatic and colloid osmotic pressure, comparing plasma and interstitial fluid.
How does acute inflammation lead to oedema?
- Arteriolar dilatation leads to increase in hydrostatic pressure
- increased permeability of vessel walls leads to loss of protein into interstitium
- net flow of fluid out of vessel leads to oedema
Define ‘oedema’
Excess of fluid in the interstitium
What is the difference between transudate and exudate?
Fluid loss due to inflammation will have a high protein content and is referred to as an EXUDATE, while fluid loss due to hydrostatic pressure imbalance will have low protein content and is a TRANSUDATE
Give some examples of mechanisms of vascular leakage
- endothelial contraction
- cytoskeletal reorganisation
- direct injury, eg toxic burns, chemicals
- leukocyte dependent injury
- increased transcytosis
Why does plasma contain fibrin?
It produces a meshwork which localises the inflammation and prevents it from spreading to the entire serosa cavity
What is the main cell involved with the cellular phase of acute inflammation?
Neutrophil leukocyte (aka ‘polymorph’)
Outline the four stages of infiltration of neutrophils into tissue
1) Stasis causes neutrophils to line up at the edge of blood vessels along the endothelium (‘margination’)
2) neutrophils roll along endothelium, sticking intermittently (‘rolling’)
3) they then stick more effectively (‘adhesion’)
4) neutrophils move through blood vessel wall (‘emigration’)
How do cell adhere in neutrophil migration?
They use proteins called selectins and integrins to adhere to the cell wall
How do neutrophils manage to get through the blood vessels?
- relaxation of inter-endothelial cell junctions
- digestion of vascular basement membrane
- movement