Title: Injury, Inflammation,
1Injury, Inflammation, Repair
- Mark A. Merrick, PhD, ATC
- Director, Athletic Training Division
- The Ohio State University
2Overview
- Types of Injury
- Acute Inflammation
- Soft Tissue Repair
- Chronic Inflammation
- Phases of Healing
- Clinical Applications
3Types of Injury
- Primary Injury
- The initial, immediate trauma associated with an
injury - Many Causes
- Physical / Mechanical
- Metabolic (hypoxia)
- Thermal
- Biological (infections)
- Chemical
- Nothing we can do to limit after the fact
4Types of Injury
- Secondary Injury
- Additional injury that occurs as a result of the
primary injury
5Secondary Injury
- Two types
- secondary enzymatic
- secondary hypoxic (better called secondary
ischemic) - Affects uninjured cells on periphery of the
primary lesion - Increases total quantity of tissue damage
- potentially increases healing time
6Secondary Injury Knights Model
7Secondary Enzymatic Injury
- Lysosomes release enzymes
- enzymes not specifically identified
- phospholipases acid hydrolases?
- Enzymes damage surrounding cells
- cleave hydrocarbon chains from membrane
phospholipids - Cell Membrane loses integrity polarity
- Hydropic Swelling..Cell death
8Secondary Hypoxic Injury
- Knight thought this more important
- Vascular Inflammatory Changes cause a period
of hypoxia - Causes a shift to anaerobic metabolism
- Eventual inability to produce adequate ATP
- Failure of membrane ion pumps
- Hydropic swelling..Cell Death
9Where does hypoxia come from?
- Damaged Blood Vessels
- Hemostasis / Clotting
- Inflammation induced hemoconcentration
- thicker blood does not flow as well
- Increased extravascular pressure from expanding
hematoma - Pain induced muscle spasm
- Hydropic swelling of injured cells
10Hypoxia v. Ischemia
- Knight suggests hypoxia (inadequate oxygen) is
the problem, but ischemia (inadequate blood flow)
is probably more correct. - Ischemia causes 3 physiologic problems
- hypoxia
- inadequate supply of nutrients (e.g. glucose)
- inadequate removal of waste
11Secondary Ischemic Injury
- Ischemia
- similar mechanisms to hypoxia
- injury generally occurs sooner than with hypoxia
alone - loss of membrane integrity and ion pumps
- influx of Ca2 and other ions
- mitochondrial swelling and cellular swelling
- cell death
12Overview
- Types of Injury
- Acute Inflammation
- Soft Tissue Repair
- Chronic Inflammation
- Phases of Healing
- Clinical Applications
13Acute Inflammation
- What is it?
- Series of reactions of vascularized tissue to
injury - What is its purpose?
- Defend against foreign substances (infection)
- Dispose of dead / dying tissue
- Immobilize injured area
- Compartmentalize area
14Acute Inflammation
- Events in Acute Inflammation
- Neurologic events
- Hemodynamic events
- Cellular events
- Events Overlap and are related
- Events are the same regardless of cause of
inflammation - Magnitude of events depends on
- severity of injury
- immune status
- temperature
15Acute Inflammation Neurologic events
- Initial Vasoconstriction
- Transatory reflexive
- usually lasts up to 30 seconds
- Gradual Vasodilation
- Relaxation of reflexive spasm
- Causes bleeding to start
16Acute Inflammation Hemodynamic events
- Vasodilation
- From relaxation of reflex chemical mediators
- Slowing of bloodflow
- Relationship of flow to diameter
- Margination of Leukocytes
- ???? Nobel prize for Medicine
- Hemostasis
- Permeability Changes
17Acute Inflammation Hemodynamic events
- Permeability Changes
- Mostly from inflammatory chemicals
- Occurs in capillaries small venules
- Junctions between epithelial cells loosen
- Fluid leaks (transudate exudate)
- Leads to hemoconcentration
- Makes margination easier
18Acute Inflammation Cellular Events
- Mast Cells
- Already present in connective tissue
- Damage to connective tissue leads to activation
degranulation - Release histamine (increases vasodilation
permeability) - Release heparin (anticoagulant)
19Acute Inflammation Cellular Events
- Circulating Leukocytes
- Marginated cells emmigrate from vasculature
(diapedesis) smaller first, larger later - Basophils release anti-coagulants
- Neutrophils vicious phagocytes
- Release many chemical mediators chemotaxis
- Primary job is to phagocytize bacteria
- Magnifies inflammation above required level in
musculoskeletal injury - Monocytes Macrophages
- Arrive 5h post-injury
- Remove dead tissue debris (clean up the mess)
20Acute Inflammation Chemical events
- Over 180 different chemicals involved in acute
inflammation - Sources damaged cells, inflammatory cells,
platelets, plasma, etc. - Histamine 1st chemical, strong vasodilator
increases permeability - Bradykinins increases permeability pain
(especially with prostaglandins) - Prostaglandins made from released phospholipids
(arachadonic acid cascade) - Target of NSAIDS steroidal anti-inflammatories
21Inflammatory Process
22Acute Inflammation big picture
- First few seconds
- Immediate vasoconstriction
- First Hour
- Gradual vasodilation
- Hemostasis begins
- Mast Cell degranulation
- Margination of WBCs
- Large scale neutrophil response begins
- After the first hour?
- Hemoconcentration from edema
- Ischemia
- Growing interaction of chemical mediators
- Emmigration of larger WBCs
- Complement System
23Acute Inflammation
- Post- Acute Inflammation (Chronic inflammation?)
- Clinicians Immunologists differ on terminology
- Follows acute phase response if tissue is damaged
- Characterized by macrophages, lymphocytes (CD8,
CD4)
24Overview
- Types of Injury
- Acute Inflammation
- Soft Tissue Repair
- Chronic Inflammation
- Phases of Healing
- Clinical Applications
25Post-Acute Inflammation
- Processes depend on level of damage
- Resolution if little or no damage
- Inflammation resolves, return to competition
- Repair regeneration if meaningful damage
- Regeneration replacement with the same kind of
tissue (depends on tissue) - Labile fully regenerates (e.g. epithelium)
- Stabile partially regenerates (e.g. bone)
- Permanent does not regenerate (e.g. muscle)
26Tissue Repair
- Fibroplasia fibrous repair
- Formulation of Granulation tissue
- Capillary budding results from mitogens
- PDGF most important, hypoxia contributes
- Forms meshlike framework for scar development
- Infiltration of fibroblasts
- Collagen laid down in random pattern
- Structure can be manipulated!!!!!
- Scar tissues excessive if inflammation
re-initiated
27Tissue Repair
- Maturation Remodeling
- Initial scar formation takes weeks
- Scar matures
- Longest part of inflammation (over 1 yr)
- Re-absorb temporary vasculature
- Scar shrinks (contraction) changes color
- Scar remodels
- Collagen fibers re-align with stress (SAID)
- Less tensile strength than tissue it replaces
28Overview
- Types of Injury
- Acute Inflammation
- Soft Tissue Repair
- Chronic Inflammation
- Phases of Healing
- Clinical Applications
29Chronic Inflammation
- Immunologists define as period when macrophages
predominate - Clinicians define as recurrent inflammation prior
to completion of repair or resolution - Cellular Aspects
- Leukocytes during early post-acute phase
- CD8 (T- killer) CD4 (delayed hypersensitivity)
30Chronic Inflammation
- Easy to re-start inflammation
- Clinically, must control activity level protect
injury site - Leads to hypertrophic scarring
- Additional infiltration of fibroblasts
- Abundance of stimulating chemicals