Patho chapter 3
cellular response depends on
ability of cells, primarily leukocytes, erythrocytes, platelets to migrate/move across endothelial cells + get to exact site of injury
process of inflammation requires
ability to recognize injury, activate response, appropriately shut down response when injury has passed result: either tissue repair or regeneration or formation of scar tissue
blood vessels dilate (widen) to
accommodate increased blood flow to site of injury
inflammatory mediators can circulate continuously w/in blood plasma
accomplished thru work of 3 major interrelated pathways pathways responsible for activation + deactivation of inflammatory mediators that circulate in plasma
mucous membranes purpose
areas not covered by skin protected by this chemical barrier helps to neutralize or destroy many harmful invaders
Cellular adherence
attraction + binding is another step essential for effective phagocytosis
loss of ability to shut down inflammatory response effectively can lead to
autoimmunity- self attack against body tissues
Tears and saliva
ex. enzyme filled fluids that bathe mucous membranes + offer essential protection to eyes + oral cavity
Kinin pathway
Source of highly potent vasoactive inflammatory mediators amplifies inflammatory response by triggering other inflammatory mediators
Why are multiple sources + pathways needed to induce + suppress inflammation?
inflammatory response must occur to heal tissues + inflammatory mediators are so potent + powerful that multiple pathways needed to regulate these substances
non pharmacologic treatments for inflammation include
initial- rest, ice, compression, elevation resolution may improve w/ application of of warmth/heat + increased movement
ex of cytokines
interleukins, growth factors, interferons, chemokines
injury ex.
invasion by microorganisms, cellular mutations, hypoxia or anorexia, nutritional deficiencies, physical or chemical damage
cardinal signs
local manifestations of acute inflammation includes erythema (redness), heat, swelling, pain, loss of function
cytokines released from lymphocytes called
lymphokines
initial steps in inflammatory response influenced by vasoactive inflammatory mediators:
tissue injury blood vessel vasodilation increased vascular permeability activation of clotting cascade continued release + circulation of vasoactive inflammatory mediators
acute inflammation triggered by
tissue injury + essential for healing
lining of blood vessel becomes more permeable (loosens)
to allow cells to easily move from vessel into injured tissue must occur w/ basement membrane of blood vessel + adjacent endothelial cells
molecule receptors
to attract cells needed to form structural matrix
proteinases (enzymes)
to degrade dead tissue
proteinase inhibitors
to prevent healthy tissue breakdown
inflammatory mediators
to promote chemotaxis to affected area
growth factors
to promote regeneration of new cells + tissues
adhesion molecules
to provide "stickiness" to these cells
matrix or structural proteins
to rebuild architectural supports
clotting (coagulation) factors
to stop bleeding + form fibrin clot
impaired inhibition of inflammation can lead to
uncontrolled inflammatory response, depletion of proteins needed w/in 3 pathways
main point: potent inflammatory mediators are released from
variety of white blood cells in order to effectively orchestrate inflammatory process
local manifestations primarily related to
vasodilation + fluid accumulation in tissues as result of activation of inflammatory mediators
serotonin causes
vasodilation + increased vascular permeability, allowing cells of healing to arrive quickly to site of injury
exudate
watery fluid accumulates at site of injury has high protein + leukocyte concentration sign: vessels have become more permeable, cells active in phagocytosis are present + ready to fend off microorgan. healing can then begin
basophil
white blood cell that also contains granules
protection of body depends on 3 lines of defense
1. 1st line of defense- relies on protection of skin + mucous membranes 2. 2nd line of defense- effective inflammatory response 3. 3rd line of defense- activated thru specificity of immune response
3 steps needed for successful cellular response:
1. Chemotaxis 2. Cellular adherence 3. Cellular migration
increased blood + fluid needed at site of injury for 2 reasons:
1. blood is composed of cells active in phagocytosis (engulfing + removing harmful agents), cells essential in promoting healing + developing immune response 2. increased fluid dilutes harmful substances at site of injury
3 goals of acute inflammatory response
1. increase blood flow to site of injury (vascular response) 2. alert products of healing to attend to site of injury (cellular response) 3. remove injured tissue + prepare site for healing
cellular adherence regulated by:
1. inflammatory mediators (chemotactic factors released by endothelial cells) 2. Receptors that bind leukocytes to surface of endothelial near site of injury
initial treatment principles for acute inflammation:
1. reduce blood flow to local area 2. decrease swelling 3. block action of various inflammatory mediators 4. decrease pain
2nd line defense (inflammatory response) activated when
1st line of defense is inadequate nonspecific- process of waging inflammatory response is identical regardless of cause of injury
plasma proteins increased as result of
3 plasma protein systems proteins called acute phase reactants + can be measured thru use of lab tests (C reactive protein)
cellular migration
3rd essential step in cellular response
typically individual has white blood cell count of
5,000 to 10,000/mm3
placement of mast cell
allows for rapid response directly at site of injury
chronic inflammatory response
altered inflammatory response due to unrelenting injury
injury
broad sense to include any form of damage or alteration to cells or tissues
inflammatory mediators w/in cells generated in
cell plasma membrane or made up of proteins w/in cell
diapedesis
cells can move between + thru endothelial junctions
after vessels are dilated + permeable
cells essential for healing are needed at injury site
white blood cells
commonly produce + release inflammatory mediators platelets, endothelial cells, injured tissue cells are potential sources
3 pathways if inflammatory mediators in plasma
complement, clotting, kinin
vessel walls function
confine blood cells + plasma w/ injury- must be loosened to allow for movement of healing fluids + cells into damaged tissues
inflammatory mediators released from platelets + other cells
constrict blood vessels + form clot at the site
hypothalamus responsible for
controlling body temperature
goal of tissue healing + repair
cover wound, clear debris, restore structural + functional integrity of injured area 3 phases: inflammatory, proliferative, remodeling structural supports must be rebuilt + functional cells + tissues regenerated or replaced
what is a common occurrence in acute inflammatory response?
damage to healthy surrounding tissue
protective scab formed from
dried blood + exudate
leukocytosis
elevation in white blood cells or leukocytes w/ count usually above 10,000/mm3 increased circulation of white blood cells to aid in healing
lymphadenitis
enlargement + inflammation of nearby lymph nodes can occur as function of filtering or draining harmful substances at injury site
acute inflammatory response
expected body response to injury
inflammatory mediators (vasoactive)
facilitate process of widening + loosening of blood vessels at site of injury located in blood plasma + many cells (platelets, mast cells, basophils, neutrophils, endothelial cells, monocytes, macrophages)
pyrexia
fever, elevated core body temp result of inflammatory mediators acting directly on hypothalamus
systemic manifestations related to inflammatory response include
fever, leukocytosis, higher percentage of circulating plasma proteins
leukocyte is global term
for many different types of white blood cells neutrophils, monocytes, macrophages, mast cells, basophils, T + B lymphocytes
endothelial cells
form tight junction w/in inner lining of blood vessels + lymphatic vessels of heart connected to basement membrane
signals to trigger, enhance, + discontinue inflammatory response
generated w/in other white blood cells (lymphocytes, monocytes/macrophages)
corticosteroids
highly effective group of anti inflammatory drugs that work to block production of arachidonic acid + then decreasing inflammatory response have role in inhibiting immune response
ex of inflammatory mediators released by mast cells
histamine, leukotrienes, prostaglandins
cellular response is also regulated by
inflammatory mediators like the vascular response
mast cells
important inflammatory mediator leukocytes (white blood cells) that are housed thuout CT of body + near all blood vessels
impaired activation of inflammation can lead to
inadequate blood flow to injured area impair healing by limiting phagocytosis, clot formation, + repair of injured tissues
what happens during phagocytosis?
inflammatory cells release inflammatory mediators to attract more neutrophils
degranulation
mast cell breaks apart + releases inflammatory mediators in form of extracellular granules (grain like particles)
breaks in skin + mucous membranes or loss of protective fluids causes:
microorganisms + other harmful agents to enter body + threaten homeostasis
goal of treatment
minimize damage to healthy, unaffected tissue + promote rapid healing
tissue destruction
minimized by work of inhibitor proteins in plasma derived complement, clotting, kinin systems
cytokines released from monocytes or macrophages called
monokines
cytokines
more than one hundred distinct cell proteins most often found w/in white blood cells that have vital role in regulating inflammation
pharmacologic (drug) treatments for inflammation
most commonly block action of inflammatory mediators this reduces swelling, pain, redness, warmth - typical of inflammation
cytokines active from
onset of vasodilation + increased vascular permeability to resolution of inflammatory response
basement membrane
outer membrane of vessels separates vessel from tissues of body
inflammatory response has multiple components + often considered
overzealous- explains efforts of booming pharmaceutical industry to find effective anti inflammatory drugs
elevated body temp stimulates
phagocytosis + can also inhibit growth of certain microorganisms
skin and mucous membrane function
physical + chemical barrier to invasion 1st line of defense
inflammatory mediators released from endothelial cells or injured tissue cells ex.
platelet activating factor- complex lipid stored in cell membranes (endothelial cells) that line blood vessels + in many other types of cells that can become injured arachidonic acid
platelet activating factor
potent inflammatory mediator key role in promoting vessel vasodilation, clotting, attracting infection-fighting white blood cells to site of injury
neutrophil releases
potent inflammatory mediators as it works to engulf + digest impaired tissue unaffected healthy tissue also destroyed
Chemotaxis
process of moving certain cells to site of injury
mast cell is responsible for
production + immediate release of inflammatory mediators thru degranulation
platelets active in generating + releasing inflammatory mediators to
promote vasodilation, clotting, attraction of white blood cells, healing in injured tissues
Clotting pathway
promotes coagulation thru cascade of clotting factors suppresses coagulation when clotting is complete various clotting factors produce + release inflammatory mediators
inflammatory mediators associated w/ arachidonic acid
prostaglandins, lipoxins, leukotrienes, thromboxane- active in processes of vasodilation + vasoconstriction, increasing vascular permeability, bronchodilation + bronchoconstriction, attraction of leukocytes
thrombus
protective clot + subsequent scab
tissue injury requires
response at level of blood vessel near site of injury clotting + healing must occur to prevent infection
acute inflammatory response is
self limited offending agent has been destroyed + removed- feedback systems regulated by 3 plasma protein systems along w/ relevant inflammatory mediators, deactivate inflammatory response, allowing tissue to heal
example of inflammatory mediator found in platelets
serotonin, histamine
Complement pathway
several proteins that comprise 10-15% of plasma; produced in liver triggered by presence of microorganisms once triggered- activates cascade of inflammatory mediators primary role to destroy + remove microorgan. to prevent infection thru (opsonization- making bacteria vulnerable to phagocytosis), cell lysis (destruction)
skin's purpose
skin allows protective physical barrier against harmful substances in external environment
immune response wages...
specific disease depending on type of invader
chemotactic factors
specific inflammatory mediators that are activated which attract specific types of cells (neutrophil chemotactic factor attracts neutrophils)
arachidonic acid
substance derived from plasma membrane of injured cell which generates various inflammatory mediators thru complex chemical conversion