Inflammation
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Transcript Inflammation
Inflammation
Dr.ROOPA
Premed 3
Pathophysiology
Introduction:
“Inflame” – to set fire.
“Inflammation is a reaction of a tissue and
its microcirculation to a pathogenic insult.
It is characterized by the generation of
inflammatory mediators and movement of
fluid & leukocytes from the blood into
extravascular tissues.”
“dynamic response of vascularised tissue to
injury.”
Is a protective response.
Serves to bring defense & healing
mechanisms to the site of injury.
2
Naming of inflammatory
diseases:
[prefix] + ‘itis’
(exceptions exist)
crohn’s disease
3
Types of Inflammation
Acute
Chronic
Acute Inflammation
Acute inflammation is a rapid response to an
injurious agent that serves to deliver mediators of
host defense—leukocytes and plasma proteins—to
the site of injury. Acute inflammation has three
major components: (1) alterations in vascular
caliber that lead to an increase in blood
flow; (2) structural changes in the
microvasculature that permit plasma
proteins and leukocytes to leave the
circulation; and (3) emigration of the
leukocytes from the microcirculation, their
accumulation in the focus of injury, and their
activation to eliminate the offending agent
Acute inflammatory reactions are triggered
by a variety of stimuli:
• Infections (bacterial, viral, parasitic) and
microbial toxins
• Trauma (blunt and penetrating)
• Physical and chemical agents (thermal
injury, e.g., burns or frostbite; irradiation;
some environmental chemicals)
• Tissue necrosis (from any cause)
• Foreign bodies (splinters, dirt, sutures)
• Immune reactions (also called
hypersensitivity reactions)
Acute Vs Chronic
Flush, Flare &
Wheal
Acute inflammatory
cells - Neutrophils
Vascular damage
More exudation
Little or no fibrosis
Little signs Fibrosis,
Chronic
inflammatory cells
– Lymphocytes
Neo-vascularisation
No/less exudation
Prominent fibrosis
7
Table 5–1. Differences between Acute and Chronic Inflammation.
Acute
Chronic
Duration
Short (days)
Long (weeks to months)
Onset
Acute
Insidious
Specificity
Nonspecific
Specific (where immune response is activated)
Inflammatory cells
Neutrophils, macrophages
Lymphocytes, plasma cells, macrophages,
fibroblasts
Vascular changes
Active vasodilation, increased permeability
New vessel formation (granulation tissue)
Fluid exudation and edema
+
–
Cardinal clinical signs
(redness, heat, swelling, pain)
+
–
Tissue necrosis
+ (ongoing)
– (Usually)
+ (Suppurative and necrotizing inflammation)
Fibrosis (collagen deposition)
–
+
Operative host responses
Plasma factors: complement, immunoglobulins, properdin, etc;
neutrophils, nonimmune phagocytosis
Immune response, phagocytosis, repair
Systemic manifestations
Fever, often high
Low–grade fever, weight loss, anemia
Changes in peripheral blood
Neutrophil leukocytosis; lymphocytosis (in viral infections)
Frequently none; variable leukocyte changes,
increased plasma immunoglobulin
Cardinal Signs of Inflammation
Rubor : Redness –
Hyperaemia.
Calor : Warm –
Hyperaemia.
Dolor : Pain – Nerve,
Chemical med.
Tumor: Swelling –
Exudation
Loss of Function: Eg.
10
The 5 Cardinal Signs of
Heat
Redness Swelling
Pain Loss Of Func.
11
Inflammation - Mechanism
1. Vaso dilatation
2. Exudation - Edema
3. Emigration of cells
4. Chemotaxis
13
Mechanism of Inflammation:
14
Leukocyte cellular events
Leukocytes leave the vasculature routinely
through the following sequence of events:
– Margination and rolling
– Adhesion and transmigration
– Chemotaxis and activation
They are then free to participate in:
– Phagocytosis and degranulation
– Leukocyte-induced tissue injury
15
PRINCIPAL CELL EFFECTORS
1st
24 hours: NEUTROPHILS
Bacterial infections, infarction
Come from the bone marrow reserve pool
Band neutrophils: less mature cells
Neutrophils
-- the key cell
type of the
acute
inflammatory
response
17
2nd-3rd
day: neutrophils are replaced by
monocytes-macrophages
Tuberculosis, salmonellosis
Eosinophils
Allergic reactions
Parasitic infections
Hodgkin lymphoma
Mast cells and basophils
Chronic myelogenous leukemia
Myeloproliferative diseases
histamine
Cellular response of leukocytes
Emigration
Margination
Pavementing
Rolling/Tumbling
Adhesion
Transmigration
Chemotaxis
Phagocytosis
Opsonization
Intracellular microbial killing
Oxygen-dependent
Oxygen-independent
MARGINATION
THE ENDOTHELIAL CELLS ARE
ACTIVATED, ATTRACT THE SURFACE
GLYCOPROTEINS ON NEUTROPHILS
DIAPEDESIS
INSINUATION OF THE NEUTROPHILS
THRU THE ENDOTHELIAL CELLS
BASEMENT MEMBRANE
EXTRAVASCULAR TISSUES
CHEMOTAXIS
NEUTROPHIL DIRECT ITS
MIGRATION TOWARDS THE
CHEMOATTRACTANT
PHAGOCYTOSIS
FORMATION OF PHAGOSOME
LYSOSOME
PHAGOLYSOSOME
Intracellular microbial killing:
Oxygen-dependent killing is the MOST
important microbial process
Phagocytosis activates HMP shunt
oxidative burst
suppplies electrons to NADPH oxidase
superoxide anion
Hydrogen peroxide
Hydrogen peroxide
Oxides microbial proteins and disrupts cell
walls
Myeloperoxidase-halide system of
bacterial killing
After killing and eliminating the microbes,
the activated leukocytes play other
functions
1.Macrophages produce GF(growth factor)
that stimulate endothelial cell proliferation
and fibroblasts.
2.Synthesis of collagen
3,Aids in the process of repair.
DEGRANULATION
THE TOXIC SUBSTANCES MAY CAUSE
LOSS OF FUNCTION (FUNCTIO LAESA)
INCREASED BLOOD FLOW DUE TO
RELAXATION OF THE TERMINAL
ARTERIOLES
RUBOR AND CALOR
CONTRACTION OF CAPILLARY
ENDOTHELIAL CELLS
INCREASED VASCULAR PERMEABILITY
SWELLING
TUMOR
MILDEST: EXTRAVASATION OF WATER,
LOW MOLECULAR WEIGHT PROTEINS
MODERATE: + HMW(high molecular
weight) PROTEINS
SEVERE: + BLOOD CELLS
MEDIATORS OF ACUTE
INFLAMMATION
Exogenous:
microbial products
Endogenous:
1. vasoactive amines
histamine
serotonin
2. Arachidonic acid metabolites
cyclooxygenase pathway
lipooxygenase pathway
3. Cytokines
4. Kinin system
5. Complement system
Histamine
increase capillary permeability
contracts postcapillary venules
Source: basophils, mast cells,platelets
Stimuli:
binding of IgE
binding of C3a and C5a:”anaphylotoxins”
heat, cold
Interleukin-1
Serotonin
5-hydroxytryptamine
Action: similar to histamine
Source: platelets
Arachidonic acid metabolites
Cyclooxygenase
pathway
Enzymes:COX-1,COX-2
Products:
1. Platelet TxA2
-vasoconstrictor,platelet
aggregator
2. Endothelial prostacyclin
-vasodilator,inhibits
platelet aggregation
Lipooxygenase pathway
Products:
hydroperoxyeicosatetraen
oic acid (HPETE)
5-HPETE
-leukotrienes
Important leukotrienes
LTB4: chemotactic for neutrophils
LTC4,LTD4,LTE4
“slow reacting substance of anaphylaxis”
vasocontriction
bronchospasm (bronchcontriction)
increase capillary permeability
Cytokines
Soluble proteins
Secreted by numerous cells(monocytes-macrphages)
Act as “effector molecules”
IL-1 and TNF
“acute phase response”
Fever, increase WBC: systemic
Synthesis of C-reactive proteins, complement
components, fibrinogen, prothrombin
Synthesis of adhesion molecules
Neutrophil degranulation
Kinin system
Formed during active secretion in sweat
glands, salivary glands, pancreas, kidneys
End product: bradykinin
Actions: vascular permeability
arteriolar dilation
pain
Complement system
20 Plasma proteins
HEPATOCYTES,MACROPHAGES, GIT
CELLS
Action: cell lysis
COMPLEMENT CASCADE
classical pathway
alternative pathway
OPSONIZE BACTERIA
ACTIVATE PMN, MACROPHAGES
REGULATES AB RESPONSE
CLEARS AWAY IMMUNE COMPLEXES
INFLAMMATION, TISSUE DAMAGE
ANAPHYLAXIS
MAC
Classical pathway vs alternative
pathway
Starts with C1 + antigen-antibody
Bacterial surface
activates
the pathway
Ends with the membrane attack
complex
Works in the absence
of antibodies
Less efficient
C3b: opsonin
C3a and C5a: anaphylotoxins
C5b-C9: “MAC”
membrane attack complex
Inflammation Outcome
Fibrosis/Scar
Resolution
Injury
Acute
Inflammation
Chronic
Inflammation
Abscess
Ulcer
Fistula
Sinus
54
ABSCESS
Cavity filled with pus
Pus: neutrophils,
monocytes and
cellular debris
Fibrous wall
Inaccessible to
circulation
Bacterial infections,
especially
staphylococci
Ulcer
Involves epithelial surfaces
Loss of surface epithelium
Fistula
Abnormal communication between 2 organs
or
between an organ and a surface
Scar
Final result of tissue destruction
Distortion of structure
Altered function
Patterns of chronic inflammation
Chronic nonspecific inflammation
Granulomatous inflammation
Chronic nonspecific inflammation
Proliferation of fibroblasts and new vessels
Increased macrophages, lymphocytes,
plasma cells
Macrophage+antigen
B lymphocyte
activation
antibody-producing plasma
cells
Scarring and distortion of tissue
architecture
Most characteristic: CASEOUS NECROSIS
Multinucleated giant cells
TB, fungal infections, Syphyllis, cat-scratch
fever, foreign bodies