Title: If You Fail to Plan,
1"Opportunities are usually disguised by hard
work, so most people don't recognize them." - Ann
Landers
2INFLAMMATION
Dr. Venkatesh M. Shashidhar. Senior Lecturer in
Pathology Fiji School of Medicine
3Introduction
- Inflame to set fire.
- Inflammation is dynamic response of vascularised
tissue to injury. - Is a protective response.
- Serves to bring defense healing mechanisms to
the site of injury.
4Lewis Triple Response
- Flush capillary dilatation.
- Flare arteriolar dilatation.
- Weal exudation, edema.
5Red, Warm Swollen
(Flare, Flush Weal Lewis)
Triple response
6Gastric Ulcer
7Laryngitis
8Mouth Aphthus ulcer
9Acute Enteritis
10Pneumonia
11Cardinal Signs of Inflammation
- Rubor Redness Hyperaemia.
- Calor Warm Hyperaemia.
- Dolor Pain Nerve, Chemical med.
- Tumor Swelling Exudation
- Loss of Function
12Inflammation - Mechanism
- Vaso dilatation
- Exudation - Edema
- Emigration of cells
- Chemotaxis
13Mechanism of Inflammation
14(No Transcript)
15Neutrophil Margination
16Vascular changes
17Pneumonia - Exudation
18Chemical Mediators
- Chemical substances synthesised or released which
mediate the changes in inflammation. - Histamine by mast cells - vasodilatation.
- Prostaglandins Cause pain fever.
- Bradykinin - Causes pain.
19Morphologic types
- Acute
- Exudative Inflammation excess fluid. TB lung.
- Suppuration/Purulent Bacterial - neutrophils
- Fibrinous pneumonia fibrin
- Serous excess clear fluid Heart, lung
- Haemorrhagic b.v.damage - anthrax.
- Chronic inflammation with healing.
- Grannulomatous clusters of epitheloid cells
eg. TB, Fungus, Foreign body.
20Never let the competition define you. Instead,
you have to define yourself based on a point of
view you care deeply about. Tom Chappel
21Inflammation Outcome
Fungus Virus Cancers T.B. etc.
22Chronic Inflammation
23Edema
24Serous Inflammation - Effusion
25Serous Inflammation - Effusion
26Fibrinous Inflammation
27Purulent - Inflammation - PUS
28Purulent - Inflammation - PUS
29Purulent - Inflammation - PUS
30Chronic InflammationLung Abscess
31Granuloma
32Acute Vs Chronic
- Flush, Flare Weal
- 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
33"People who soar, are those who refuse to sit
back and wish things would change."Charles R.
SwindollAuthor and Pastor
34The 5 Cardinal Signs of
Heat Redness Swelling Pain Loss Of Func.
35Healing Repair
Dr. Venkatesh M. Shashidhar. Associate Professor
of Pathology Fiji School of Medicine
36Stages of Healing
- Hemorrhage
- Inflammation
- Granulation tissue (soft callus)
- Scar Fibrosis (hard callus)
- Remodeling Wound strength
37Repair
- Regeneration of injured tissue by parenchymal
cells of the same type - Replacement by connective tissue
- In other words
- Regeneration
- Scar
38Proliferative Potential
- Labile cells - continuously dividing
- Epidermis, mucosal epithelium, GI tract
epithelium etc - Stable cells - low level of replication
- Hepatocytes, renal tubular epithelium, pancreatic
acini - Permanent cells - never divide
- Nerve cells, cardiac myocytes, skeletal mm
39Polypeptide growth factors
- Most Important Mediators affecting Cell Growth
- Present in serum or produced locally
- Exert pleiotropic effects proliferation, cell
migration, differentiation, tissue remodeling - Regulate growth of cells by controlling
expression of genes that regulate cell
proliferation
40Repair by connective tissue
- Occurs when repair by parenchymal regeneration
alone cannot be accomplished - Involves production of Granulation Tissue
- replacement of parenchymal cells with
proliferating fibroblasts and vascular
endothelial cells
41Components of the processof fibrosis
- Angiogenesis - New vessels budding from old
- Fibrosis, consisting of emigration and
proliferation of fibroblasts and deposition of
ECM - Scar remodeling, tightly regulated by proteases
and protease inhibitors
42Wound healing
- Induction of acute inflammatory response by an
initial injury - Parenchymal cell regeneration
- Migration and proliferation of parenchymal and
connective tissue cells
43Wound healing (contd)
- Synthesis of ECM proteins
- Remodeling of parenchymal elements to restore
tissue function - Remodeling of connective tissue to achieve wound
strength
44Healing byFirst IntentionFocal Disruption of
Basement Membrane and loss of only a few
epithelial cellse.g. Surgical Incision
45Healing by Second IntentionLarger injury,
abscess, infarctionProcess is similar
butResults in much larger Scar and then
CONTRACTION
46Wound Strength
- After sutures are removed at one week, wound
strength is only 10 of unwounded skin (Walker
Law) - By 3-4 months, wound strength is about 80 of
unwounded skin (Walkers Law)
47Granulation tissue
48Healing Skin wound
49Healing - Skin Scar
50Factors affecting Healing
- Systemic
- Age
- Nutrition
- Vitamin def.
- Immune status
- Other diseases
- Local
- Infection
- Size or extent.
- apposition
- Blood supply
- Mobility
- Foreign body
51Summary
- Healing Proliferation Differentiation.
- Labile, Stabe Permanent cells
- Stages of Healing 1-2-3-4.
- Healing by First or Second intention.
- Skin wound healing - bone healing.
- Factors affecting healing Local / Systemic
52"Each time you are honest and conduct yourself
with honesty, a success force will drive you
toward greater success. Each time you lie, even
with a little white lie, there are strong forces
pushing you toward failure."Joseph
SugarmanAuthor and Marketing Specialist