Title: Chapter 4. Inflammation
1 2CHAPTER CONTENTS
- Introduction to inflammation
- Acute inflammation
- Chronic inflammation
3INTRODUCTION TO INFLAMMATION
- CONCEPTION
- Inflammation is a complex reaction to injurious
agents that consists of vascular response,
cellular reaction, and systemic reactions. - a defensive response fundamentally
- be divided into acute inflammation and chronic
inflammation
4INTRODUCTION TO INFLAMMATION
- CARDINAL CLINICAL SIGNS
- acute inflammation has 5 cardinal signs
- redness (rubor)
- heat (calor)
- swelling
- pain (dolor)
- loss of function
increased blood flow to the inflamed area
accumulation of fluid
release of chemicals that stimulate nerve endings
a combination of factors
5redness heat swelling pain
6INTRODUCTION TO INFLAMMATION
- SYSTEMIC CLINICAL SIGNS
- in acute inflammation
- A. fever
- B. changes in the peripheral white blood cell
count - neutrophils leukocytosis
- neutrophil nucleus shift to the left
- lymphocytosis
- neutropenia
- C. changes in plasma protein levels
- the levels of certain plasma proteins increase
entry of pyrogens and release prostaglandins
bone marrow release or production
viral infection
7mature
immature
neutrophil nucleus shift to the left
8ACUTE INFLAMMATION
- the early response of a tissue to injury
- the first line of defense against injury
- nonspecific
- changes in the microcirculation
- exudation of fluid emigration of
leukocytes - the causative factors (6 points)
9MORPHOLOGIC AND FUNCTIONAL CHANGES
- the two main components of the acute
inflammatory - the microcirculatory response
- the cellular response
10The microcirculatory response
- vasodilation and stasis
- increased permeability
- exudation of fluid
11The microcirculatory response
- A. vasodilation and stasis
- in the microcirculation
- a transient vasoconstriction
- (induced by action of mediators)
- dilation of arterioles, capillaries, and
venules - (hyperemia)
- stasis
12The microcirculatory response
- B. increased permeability
- in venules and capillaries
- active contraction of actin
- filaments in endothelial cells
- direct damage to endothelial
- cells
- leukocyte-mediated
- endothelial injury
- transcytosis increased
permeability increase (reversible)
13The microcirculatory response
- B. increased permeability
- in venules and capillaries
- three phases of increased permeability in acute
inflammation - (1) an immediate phase
- (2) a delayed response
- (3) a prolonged response
- these permeability changes are effected by
various chemical mediators
14The microcirculatory response
- C. exudation of fluid
- exudation increased passage of fluid out of the
microcirculation because of increased vascular
permeability - the composition of an exudate approaches that of
plasma, but rich in proteins - fibrinogen is converted to fibrin rapidly
- exudation should be distinguished from
transudation
15Grossly, fibrin is seen on an acute inflamed
serosal surface that changes to a rough,
yellowish bread and butter-like surface, covered
by fibrin and coagulated proteins.
16The microcirculatory response
- C. exudation of fluid
- the functions of exudation
- (1) dilute the offending agent
- (2) cause increased lymphatic flow, conveying
noxious agents to the draining lymph nodes to
facilitating a protective immune response - (3) flood the area with plasma, which contain
numerous defensive proteins
17The cellular response
- leukocyte infiltration plays an important role
- in limiting the spread of injury
- in defending the host tissue
- Acute inflammation is characterized by the active
emigration of inflammatory cells from the blood
into the area of injury.
18The cellular response
- extravasation the process of the leukocytes from
the vessel lumen to the interstitial tissue. - 3 steps of extravasation
- (1) margination, rolling and adhesion to
endothelium in the lumen - (2) transmigration across the endothelium
- (3) migration toward the site of injury
19The cellular response
- A. types of cells involved
- neutrophils
- (polymorphonuclear leukocytes)
- phagocytic cell of the macrophage system
- lymphocytes and plasma cells
20The cellular response
- B. margination, adhesion and transmigration of
neutrophils
21The cellular response
- C. emigration of neutrophils
- take 2-10minutes
intercellular junctions
basement membrane
22The cellular response
- D. chemotactic factors
- chemotaxis In the interstitial tissue,
neutrophils move toward the site of injury,
oriented along a chemical gradient. - chemotactic factors Govern the active emigration
of neutrophils and the direction in which they
move.
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24The cellular response
- E. phagocytosis
- recognition
- opsonization the agent has been coated with
immunoglobulin or complement factor 3b
(opsonins). - engulfment
- the agent opsonins
phagosome - microbial killing
- phagosome fuses with lysosomes, therefore
the enzymes can access to the engulfed
microorganism and kill them
25Process of phagocytosis
26The cellular response
- F. erythrocyte
- the orderly flow of blood is disturbed in the
dilated vessels - erythrocyte form heavy aggregates and sludging
- erythrocyte enter an inflamed area passively
- diapedesis
- hemorrhagic inflammation
27??????
28MEDIATORS OF ACUTE INFLAMMATION
- A variety of endogenous chemical mediators play
some important roles in the modulation of
inflammatory response. - originated from cells or plasma
- cell-derived mediators
- sequestered in intracellular granules and
synthesized in response to a stimulus - plasma-derived mediators
- present in precursor form and activated by
proteolytic cleavage
29summary of inflammatory mediators
- Function Major mediators
- Vasodilation 5-HT,histamine,
bradykinin ,PGE2 - Permeability 5-HT,histamine, C3a,
C5a, PAF - Chemotaxis C5a, LTB4, cytokins
- Fever Cytokines( IL-1, 6,
TNF), PG - Pain PGE2 , bradykinin
- Tissue damage Lysosomal enzymes , NO
30TYPES OF ACUTE INFLAMMATION
- A. serous inflammation
- B. fibrinous inflammation
- C. suppurative (purulent inflammation)
- D. hemorrhagic inflammation
31TYPES OF ACUTE INFLAMMATION
- A. serous inflammation
- occur in skin, and in peritoneal, pleural and
pericardial cavities - accumulation of excessive clear watery fluid
with a variable protein content - Catarrhal inflammation is a mild exudative
inflammation of a surface mucous membrance
without apparent tissue destruction.
32burn blisters
33Serous inflammation of skin
34TYPES OF ACUTE INFLAMMATION
- B. fibrinous inflammation
- large amounts of fibrinogen pass the vessel
wall, and fibrins are formed in the extracellular
spaces - Pseudomembranous inflammation is the
fibrinous inflammation occurred on a mucosal
surface, and a membranous film consisting mainly
of fibrin mixed with necrotic cells appears on
the surface of the affected mucosa.
35Fibrinous pericarditis
36Fibrinous pericarditis
37pseudo-membranous inflammation
bacillary dysentery
38pseudo-membranous inflammation
diphtheria
39TYPES OF ACUTE INFLAMMATION
- C. suppurative (purulent inflammation)
- the formation of purulent exudates or pus
- Pus is made up of neutrophils, necrotic cells
and edema fluid. - Abscess is a localized collection of purulent
inflammation accompanied by liquefactive necrosis.
40 Abscess of kidney
41 Abscess of brain
42Abscess of liver
Abscess of kidney
43TYPES OF ACUTE INFLAMMATION
- D. hemorrhagic inflammation
- marked hemorrhage is the predominant
pathological change
44COURSE OF ACUTE INFLAMMATION
- A. resolution
- B. repair
- C. suppuration
- D. chronic inflammation
45DIAGNOSIS OF ACUTE INFLAMMATION
- surface structures
- local cardinal signs permit diagnosis
- internal organs
- systemic changes may first manifest
- rarely, examine a fluid exudates or tissue sample
46CHRONIC INFLAMMATION
- the sum of the responses mounted by tissue
against a persistent injurious agent - commonly show
- A. immune response
- B. phagocytosis
- C. necrosis
- D. repair
47CHRONIC INFLAMMATION
- the main features include
- (1) mononuclear cell infiltration
- macrophages play dominant rolls
- (2) tissue destruction
- (3) granulation tissue formation and fibrosis
- be distinguished from acute inflammation
48CHRONIC INFLAMMATION IN RESPONSE TO ANTIGENIC
INJURIOUS AGENTS
49CHRONIC INFLAMMATION IN RESPONSE TO ANTIGENIC
INJURIOUS AGENTS
- morphologic types
- A. granulomatous chronic inflammation
- B. nongranulomatous chronic inflammation
50granulomatous chronic inflammation
- a special type of chronic inflammation
- character the formation of granuloma
- granuloma an aggregate of macrophages
- two types
- epithelioid cell granuloma
- foreign body granuloma
51granulomatous chronic inflammation
- characteristic features
- the formation of epithelioid cell granuloma
- epithelioid cell activated macrophages that
appear as large cells with abundant pale, foamy
cytoplasm - langhans-type giant cell derived from fusion of
macrophages and characterized by 10-50 nuclei
around the periphery of the cell
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53granulomatous chronic inflammation
- Granulomas are usually surrounded by lymphocytes,
plasma cells, fibroblasts, and collagen.
54granulomatous chronic inflammation
- causes
- (1) When macrophages have successfully
phagocytosed the injurious agent but it survives
inside them - (2) When an active T lymphocyte-mediated cellular
immune response occurs
55granulomatous chronic inflammation
- changes in affected tissues
- granulomas expand and fuse with adjacent
granulomas to - form large
- masses
56granulomatous chronic inflammation
- changes in affected tissues
- in many infectious granulomas, central caseous
necrosis is a common feature
57granulomatous chronic inflammation
- caseous necrosis
- gross yellowish-white and resembles crumbly
cheese - microscopic finely granular, pink, and amorphous
58nongranulomatous chronic inflammation
- characteristic features
- The accumulation of sensitized lymphocytes,
plasma cells, and macrophages in the injured
area. - These cells are scattered diffusely throughout
the tissue. - Scattered tissue necrosis and fibrosis are
common.
59nongranulomatous chronic inflammation
- causes and changes in affected tissues
- A. chronic viral infections
- B. chronic autoimmune diseases
- C. chronic chemical intoxications
- D. chronic nonviral infections
- E. allergic inflammation and metazoal infections
60CHRONIC INFLAMMATION IN RESPONSE TO NONANTIGENIC
INJURIOUS AGENTS
- characteristic features
- the formation of foreign body granuloma
- foreign body giant cells numerous nuclei
dispersed throughout the cell - foreign material is usually identifiable in the
center of the granuloma - tissue necrosis is not an associated feature
- (figure 4-19)
61Foreign body granuloma
62FUNCTION AND RESULT OF CHRONIC INFLAMMATION
- function of chronic inflammation
- serves to contain and remove an injurious
agent that is not easily eradicated by the body - dependent on immunologic reactivity
- (1) direct killing by activated lymphocytes
- (2) interaction with antibodies
- (3) activation of macrophages
63FUNCTION AND RESULT OF CHRONIC INFLAMMATION
- result of chronic inflammation
- associated with tissue necrosis and implies
serious illness - associated fibrosis a repair mechanism and
perhaps another side effect
64MIXED ACUTE AND CHRONIC INFLAMMATION
- chronic inflammation may follow acute
inflammation - or result from repeated bouts of acute
inflammation - features of both types of inflammation may
coexist in certain circumstances
65CHRONIC SUPPURATIVE INFLAMMATION
- It is difficult to remove the large amounts of
pus associated with chronic suppurative
inflammation. - The surrounding viable tissue responds with a
longstanding inflammatory process in which areas
of suppuration alternate with areas of chronic
inflammation and fibrosis.
66CHRONIC SUPPURATIVE INFLAMMATION
- The difference between an acute and chronic
abscess lies in the thickness of the fibrous
wall both form are filled with pus.
67 Abscess of liver
68RECURRENT ACUTE INFLAMMATION
- if there is predisposing cause, repeated attacks
of acute inflammation may occur - Each attack of acute inflammation is follwed by
incomplete resolution that leads to a
progressively increasing number of chronic
inflammatory calls and fibrosis. - subacute inflammation
- acute-on-chronic inflammation
69CLINICAL AND PATHOLOGIC DIAGNOSIS
- difficult
- Precise diagnosis usually requires recourse to a
full range of clinical and pathologic studies. - table 4-9