Response to Injury III: Chronic Inflammation

    Cards (22)

    • How does chronic inflammation arise?
      It arises as:
      a progression from acute inflammation
      following repeated episodes of acute inflammation
      de novoif the causative agent only produces a mild acute response
    • What happens in chronic inflammation?
      The process of tissue destruction takes place alongside that of healing and repair so it's integrated and the 2 processes should be considered together
    • What are the features of chronic inflammation?
      It's very variable but some prevailing themes are:

      - Tissue destruction & ulceration

      - The inflammatory infiltrate is a mixture of macrophages, plasma cells, and lymphocytes; some polymorphs may be present

      - The relative contribution of each cell type varies depending on the inflammatory stimulus

      - Chronic inflammation is associated with the production of new fibrous tissue through granulation tissue formation (healing)
    • What is a mechanism of chronic inflammation?
      Proliferation of macrophages and lymphocytes
    • What are the causes of chronic inflammation?
      These signals converge on target cells, lymphocytes, macrophages, plasma cells, this will cause an inflammatory response
    • What pharmacological agents can you use to interfere with production of inflammatory mediators?
      Aspirin
      NSAIDs
      Hydrocortisone
      Antihistamines
      Inhalers (various)
      Other steroids
    • What patterns can you divide chronic inflammation into?
      Serous
      Fibrinous
      Suppurative (purulent)
      Granulomatous
    • What is granulomatous inflammation?
      A form of chronic inflammation characterised by the formation of granulomas
    • What is a granuloma?
      A collection of activated macrophages
    • What do granulomas look like histologically?
      Abundant eosinophilic cytoplasm and look vaguely like epithelial cells so are termed 'epithelioid cells
    • What can macrophages aggregate to form?
      Giant cells
    • What may solitary granulomas form in response to?
      Persistent local inflammatory stimuli (e.g. foreign bodies)
    • What are some examples of chronic granulomatous diseases?
      TB
      Leprosy
      Sarcoidosis
      Crohn's disease
      Oro-facial granulomatosis
      Chronic granulomatosis disease
    • What is acid fast bacilli (AFB)?
      A general term used to describe bacteria stained using the 'Ziehl Neelsen' (ZN) technique

      In common usage, the term refers to M. tuberculosis
    • What happens in TB?
      Mycobacteria are ingested into the macrophages which excite a T cell response

      As they are intracellular, they are protected from immunological attack & persist in the tissues.
    • What is a caseating granuloma?
      It is a cheese-like necrosis ( tissue death), typically a feature of a granuloma of TB

      Features include:

      -dense mass of epithelioid cells
      -T lymphocytes
      -caseous necrosis centrally,
      -Langerhans type giant cells,
      - AFBs
    • Why can TB be considered a (Type IV) hypersensitivity reaction?

      Because the intracellular mycobacteria drive ongoing inflammatory activity

      This is characterised by a cell mediated (T cell) response

      A sequel to this is tissue damage & repair

      Tissue damage is caused by the hosts own cells
    • What is rheumatoid arthritis?
      A chronic, systemic inflammatory disorder that mainly affects joints

      These become deformed and painful with loss of function
      It may also have extra-articular features
    • What makes rheumatoid arthritis a poly-arthritis?
      Typically when >5 joints are involved
    • What cytokines are involved in the signalling pathway for inflammatory arthritis?
      TNF-a
      Interleukin-1
      Interleukin-6
    • Describe the process of what happens in rheumatoid arthritis.
      The inflammatory process causes the damage
    • Summarise chronic inflammation:
      - Can be both protective and destructive

      -Reflects a complex interrelationship between the response to damaging stimuli and hypersensitivity

      -Is associated with granulation tissue formation and fibrous repair - in some instances this is helpful but in others it leads to tissue damage and loss of function.
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