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Inflammation: Jan Laco, M.D., PH.D

This document discusses inflammation, including its definition, causes, mechanisms, classification, and outcomes. It describes the classic signs of inflammation as heat, redness, swelling, pain, and loss of function. The document outlines the cellular and vascular changes involved in acute and chronic inflammation, as well as different morphological patterns such as exudative, proliferative, and granulomatous inflammation. Specific conditions like tuberculosis, leprosy, and syphilis are also summarized.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
54 views

Inflammation: Jan Laco, M.D., PH.D

This document discusses inflammation, including its definition, causes, mechanisms, classification, and outcomes. It describes the classic signs of inflammation as heat, redness, swelling, pain, and loss of function. The document outlines the cellular and vascular changes involved in acute and chronic inflammation, as well as different morphological patterns such as exudative, proliferative, and granulomatous inflammation. Specific conditions like tuberculosis, leprosy, and syphilis are also summarized.

Uploaded by

Vikas Viki
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Inflammation

Jan Laco, M.D., Ph.D.


Inflammation
 complex protective reaction
 caused by various endo- and exogenous
stimuli
 injurious agents are destroyed, diluted or
walled-off
 without inflammation and mechanism of
healing could organism not survive
 can be potentially harmfull
Terminology
 Greek root + -itis
 metritis, not uteritis
 kolpitis, not vaginitis
 nephritis, not renitis
Mechanisms
 local - in cases of mild injury
 systemic
 3 major:
 1. alteration
 2. exsudation - inflammatory exsudate
– liquid (exsudate)
– cellular (infiltrate)
 3. proliferation (formation of granulation and
fibrous tissue)
 usualy - all 3 components - not the same intensity
Classification
 several points of view
 length:
– acute × chronic (+ subacute, hyperacute)

 according to predominant component


– 1. alterative (predominance of necrosis - diphtheria)
– 2. exsudative (pleuritis)
– 3. proliferative (cholecystitis - thickening of the wall by
fibrous tissue)
Classification
 according to histological features
– nonspecific (not possible to trace the etiology) - vast
majority
– specific (e.g. TB)

 according to causative agent


– aseptic (sterile) - chemical substances, congelation,
radiation - inflammation has a reparative character
– septic (caused by living organisms) - inflammation has
a protective character
Acute inflammation
 important role in inflammation has
microcirculation!
 supply of white blood cells, interleukins,
fibrin, etc.
Local symptomatology
 classical 5 symptoms (Celsus 1st c. B.C.,
Virchow 19th c. A.D.)
 1. calor - heat
 2. rubor - redness
 3. tumor - swelling
 4. dolor - pain
 5. functio laesa - loss (or impairment) of
function
Systemic symptomatology
 fever (irritation of centre of thermoregulation)
– TNF, IL-1
– IL-6 – high erythrocyte sedimentation rate
 leucocytosis - increased number of WBC
– bacteria – neutrophils
– parasites – eosinophils
– viruses - lymphocytosis
 leucopenia - decreased " "
– viral infections, salmonella infections, rickettsiosis
 immunologic reactions - increased level of some
substances (C-reactive protein)
Vascular changes
 vasodilation
– increased permeability of vessels due to widened
intercell. junctions and contraction of endothelial cells
(histamin, VEGF, bradykinin)
 protein poor transudate (edema)
 protein rich exsudate

 leukocyte-dependent endothelial injury


– proteolysis – protein leakage
  platelet adhesion  thrombosis
Cellular events
 leukocytes margination  rolling  adhesion 
transmigration
 emigration of:
– neutrophils (1-2 days)
– monocytes (2-3 days)
 chemotaxis
– endogenous signaling molecules - lymphokines
– exogenous - toxins
 phagocytosis - lysosomal enzymes, free radicals,
oxidative burst
 passive emigration of RBC - no active role in
inflamm. - hemorrhagic inflammation
Phagocytosis
 adhesion and invagination into cytoplasm
 engulfment
 lysosomes - destruction
 in highly virulent microorganisms can die
leucocyte and not the microbe
 in highly resistant microorganisms -
persistence within macrophage - activation
after many years
Outcomes of acute inflammation
 1. resolution - restoration to normal, limited injury
– chemical substances neutralization
– normalization of vasc. permeability
– apoptosis of inflammatory cells
– lymphatic drainage
 2. healing by scar
– tissue destruction
– fibrinous inflammtion
– purulent infl.  abscess formation (pus, pyogenic
membrane, resorption - pseudoxanthoma cells - weeks
to months)
 3. progression into chronic inflammation
Chronic inflammation
 reasons:
– persisting infection or prolonged exposure to
irritants (intracell. surviving of agents - TBC)
– repeated acute inflamations (otitis, rhinitis)
– primary chronic inflammation - low virulence,
sterile inflammations (silicosis)
– autoimmune reactions (rheumatoid arthritis,
glomerulonephritis, multiple sclerosis)
Chronic inflammation
 chronic inflammatory cells ("round cell" infiltrate)
– lymphocytes
– plasma cells
– monocytes/macrophages activation of macrophages by
various mediators - fight against invaders
 lymphocytes  plasma cells, cytotoxic (NK)
cells, coordination with other parts of immune
system
 plasma cells - production of Ig
 monocytes-macrophages-specialized cells
(siderophages, gitter cells, mucophages)
Morphologic patterns of
inflammation
 1. alterative
 2. exsudative
– 2a. serous
– 2b. fibrinous
– 2c. suppurative
– 2d. pseudomembranous
– 2e. necrotizing, gangrenous
 3. proliferative
– primary (rare) x secondary (cholecystitis)
Morphologic patterns of
inflammation
 2a. serous - excessive accumulation of fluid, few
proteins - skin blister, serous membranes - initial
phases of inflamm.
 modification - catarrhal - accumulation of mucus

 2b. fibrinous - higher vascular permeability -


exsudation of fibrinogen -> fibrin - e.g.
pericarditis (cor villosum, cor hirsutum - "hairy"
heart
 fibrinolysis  resolution; organization  fibrosis
 scar
 2c. suppurative (purulent) - accumulation of
neutrophillic leucocytes - formation of pus
(pyogenic bacteria)
 interstitial
– phlegmone – diffuse soft tissue
– abscess - localized collection
 acute – border – surrounding tissue
 chronic – border - pyogenic membrane
 Pseudoabscess – pus in lumen of hollow organ
 formation of suppurative fistule
 accumulation of pus in preformed cavities -
empyema (gallbladder, thoracic)
 complications of suppurative inflamm.:
 bacteremia (no clinical symptoms!; danger of
formation of secondary foci of inflamm.
(endocarditis, meningitis)
 sepsis (= massive bacteremia) - septic fever,
activation of spleen, septic shock
 thrombophlebitis - secondary inflammation of
wall of the vein with subsequent thrombosis -
embolization - pyemia - hematogenous abscesses
(infected infarctions)
 lymphangiitis, lymphadenitis
 2d. pseudomembranous - fibrinous
pseudomembrane (diphtheria - Corynebacterium,
dysentery - Shigella) - fibrin, necrotic mucosa,
etiologic agens, leucocytes
 2e. necrotizing - inflammatory necrosis of the
surface - ulcer (skin, gastric)
– gangrenous - secondary modification by bacteria - wet
gangrene - apendicitis, cholecystitis - risk of perforation
- peritonitis
Granulomatous inflammation
 distinctive chronic inflammation type
 cell mediated immune reaction (delayed)
 aggregates of activated macrophages 
epithelioid cell  multinucleated giant cells
(of Langhans type x of foreign body type)
 NO agent elimination but walling off
 intracellulary agents (TBC)
Granulomatous inflammation
 1. Bacteria
– TBC
– leprosy
– syphilis (3rd stage)
 2. Parasites + Fungi
 3. Inorganic metals or dust
– silicosis
– berylliosis
 4. Foreign body
– suture (Schloffer „tumor“), breast prosthesis
 5. Unknown - sarcoidosis
Tuberculosis – general
pathology
 1. TBC nodule – proliferative
 Gross: grayish, firm, 1-2 mm (milium)  central
soft yellow necrosis (cheese-like – caseous) 
calcification
 Mi: central caseous necrosis (amorphous
homogenous + karyorrhectic powder) +
macrophages  epithelioid cells 
multinucleated giant cells of Langhans type +
lymphocytic rim
 2. TBC exsudate – sero-fibrinous exsudate
(macrophages)
Leprosy
 M. leprae, Asia, Africa
 in dermal macrophages and Schwann cells
 air droplets + long contact
 rhinitis, eyelid destruction, facies leontina
 1. lepromatous – infectious
– skin lesion – foamy macrophages (Virchow cells) +
viscera
 2. tuberculoid – steril
– in peripheral nerves – tuberculoid granulomas -
anesthesia
 death – secondary infections + amyloidosis
Syphilis
 Treponema pallidum (spichochete)
 STD + transplacental fetus infection
 acquired (3 stages) x congenital
 basic microspical appearance:
– 1. proliferative endarteritis (endothelial hypertrophy 
intimal fibrosis  local ischemia) + inflammation
(plasma cells)
– 2. gumma – central coagulative necrosis + specific
granulation tissue + fibrous tissue
Syphilis
 1. primary syphilis - contagious
 chancre (ulcus durum, hard chancre)
 M: penis x F: vagina, cervix
 painless, firm ulceration + regional painless
lymphadenopathy
 spontaneous resolve (weeks)  scar
Syphilis
 2. secondary syphilis - contagious
 after 2 months
 generalized lymphadenopathy + various
mucocutaneous lesions
 condylomata lata - anogenital region, inner
thighs, oral cavity
Syphilis
 3. tertiary syphilis
 after long time (5 years)
 1) cardiovascular - syphilitic aortitis (proximal a.)
– endarteritis of vasa vasorum  scaring of media 
dilation  aneurysm
 2) neurosyphilis – tabes dorsalis + general paresis
– degeneration of posterior columns of spinal cord 
sensory + gait abnormality
– cortical atrophy  psychic deterioration
 3) gumma – ulcerative lesions of bone, skin,
mucosa – oral cavity
Congenital syphilis
 1) abortus
– hepatomegaly + pancreatitis + pneumonia alba
 2) infantile syphilis
– chronic rhinitis (snuffles) + mucocutaneous lesions
 3) late (tardive, congenital) syphilis
– > 2 years duration
– Hutchinson triad – notched central incisors + keratitis
(blindness) + deafness (injury of n. VIII)
– mulberry molars + saddle nose

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