Transcript
Page 1: Inflammation, role and types

INFLAMMATION

get in touch

Dr. Ali YaldrumB.D.S, M.Sc (London)

Faculty of Dentistry, SEGi University

Page 2: Inflammation, role and types

Survival of all organisms requires they eliminate:

• foreign invaders (infectious pathogens: viruses, bacteria, fungi)

• damaged tissues

• Achieved via a complex mechanism called “inflammation”

Page 3: Inflammation, role and types

Inflammation is a protective response intended to eliminate the initial cause of cell injury as well as the necrotic cells and tissues resulting from the original insult

Page 4: Inflammation, role and types

Diluting Destroying/ Neutralising

Heal & Repair

Restoration of Function

Page 5: Inflammation, role and types

A double edge sword?

Although inflammation helps clear infections and other noxious stimuli and initiates repair, the inflammatory reaction and the subsequent repair process can cause considerable harm.

Page 6: Inflammation, role and types
Page 7: Inflammation, role and types

Signs of Inflammation

Cardinal signs are

• Heat (calor)

• Redness (rubor)

• Swelling (tumor)

Page 8: Inflammation, role and types

2 additional signs seen in acute inflammation

• Pain (dolor)

• Loss of function (function laesa)

Page 9: Inflammation, role and types

Steps of Inflammation

5R’s

1. Recognition of injurious agent 2. Recruitment of leukocytes 3. Removal of agent 4. Regulation of the response 5. Resolution

Page 10: Inflammation, role and types

Types of Inflammation

• Acute

• Chronic

Page 11: Inflammation, role and types

Acute Inflammation

Page 12: Inflammation, role and types

Acute Inflammation

rapid response to injury or microbes and other foreign substances that is designed to deliver leukocytes and plasma proteins to sites of injury

Page 13: Inflammation, role and types

Stimuli

can be triggered by a variety of stimuli

• Infections

• Trauma

• Physical & chemical agents

• Foreign bodies

• Immune reactions

Page 14: Inflammation, role and types
Page 15: Inflammation, role and types

Acute inflammat ion has two ma jo r components

• Vascular changes

• Cellular events

Page 16: Inflammation, role and types

Vascular

• Changes in Vascular Caliber and Flow

• Increased Vascular Permeability

Page 17: Inflammation, role and types

Changes in Vascular Caliber and Flow

• Changes in blood vessels begin rapidly after infection or injury but may develop at variable rates, depending on the nature and severity of the original inflammatory stimulus.

Page 18: Inflammation, role and types

transient vasoconstriction

arteriolar vasodilation

increased viscosity & slowing of circulation

stasis

migration

lasting few seconds

Page 19: Inflammation, role and types
Page 20: Inflammation, role and types

• Endothelial cell contraction leads to intercellular gaps in post capillary venules

Page 21: Inflammation, role and types

• Histamine, bradykinin, leukotrines

• immediate

• short lived 15 to 30 mins

• called as immediate transient response

Page 22: Inflammation, role and types

• IL1 and TNF

• prolonged changes in cytoskeleton of endothelial cells

• take 4-6 hours to develop

• lasts for up to 24 hours

Page 23: Inflammation, role and types

Cellular Events

• an important function of the inflammatory response is to deliver leukocytes to the site of injury and to activate them

Page 24: Inflammation, role and types

Leukocyte recruitment

Sequence consists of: 1. margination, adhesion to endothelium &

rolling along the vessel wall 2. firm adhesion to endothelium

Page 25: Inflammation, role and types

3. transmigration between endothelial cells; 4. migration in interstitial tissues toward a

chemotactic stimulus

Page 26: Inflammation, role and types
Page 27: Inflammation, role and types

Leukocyte activation

• Once leukocytes have been recruited to the site of infection or tissue necrosis, they must be activated to perform their functions

Page 28: Inflammation, role and types

• Stimuli for activation include microbes, products of necrotic cells, and several mediators

Page 29: Inflammation, role and types

Phagocytosis

Consists of 3 distinct but interrelated steps

1. recognition and attachment of the particle to the ingesting leukocyte

2. engulfment, with subsequent formation of a phagocytic vacuole

3. killing and degradation of the ingested material.

Page 30: Inflammation, role and types

Patterns of acute inflammation

Page 31: Inflammation, role and types

Patterns of acute inflammation

• vascular and cellular reactions that characterize acute inflammation are reflected in the morphologic appearance of the reaction

Page 32: Inflammation, role and types

• serous inflammation

• fibrinous inflammation

• suppurative inflammation

Page 33: Inflammation, role and types

serous

characterized by:

• the outpouring of a watery

• re lat ive ly prote in-poor flu id that , depending on the site of injury

Page 34: Inflammation, role and types

fibrinous

• occurs as a consequence of more severe injuries,

• resulting in greater vascular permeability that allows large molecules (such as fibrinogen) to pass the endothelial barrier

Page 35: Inflammation, role and types

suppurative

• manifested by the presence of large amounts of purulent exudate (pus) consisting of neutrophils, necrotic cells, and edema fluid

Page 36: Inflammation, role and types

• Abscesses are focal collections of pus that may be caused by seeding of pyogenic organisms into a tissue or by secondary infections of necrotic foci.

Page 37: Inflammation, role and types

Chemical mediators of inflammation

Page 38: Inflammation, role and types

Chemical mediators of inflammation

• Mediators may be produced locally by cells at the site of inflammation,

• or may be circulating in the plasma as inactive precursors that are activated at the site of inflammation

Page 39: Inflammation, role and types
Page 40: Inflammation, role and types
Page 41: Inflammation, role and types

Chronic Inflammation

Page 42: Inflammation, role and types

Chronic Inflammation

• is inflammation of prolonged duration (weeks to months to years) in which active inflammation, tissue injury, and healing proceed simultaneously.

Page 43: Inflammation, role and types

Characterized by:

• infiltration with mononuclear cells

• plasma cells tissue destruction

• repair

• angiogenesis

• fibrosis

Page 44: Inflammation, role and types

When acute inflammation converts to chronic?

Page 45: Inflammation, role and types

Chronic inflammation arises in the following settings: 1. T l ymphocy te -med ia ted immune

r e s p o n s e c a l l e d d e l a y e d - t y p e hypersensitivity

2. Immune-mediated inflammatory diseases 3. autoimmune diseases

Page 46: Inflammation, role and types

Chronic Inflammatory Cells and Mediators

• fundamen ta l f ea tu re o f ch ron i c inflammation is its persistence

• results from complex interactions between the cells that are recruited to the site of inflammation and are activated at this site

Page 47: Inflammation, role and types

Macrophages

• dominant cell of chronic inflammation

• derived from circulating blood monocytes

• act as filters for particulate matter, microbes, and senescent cells, as well as acting as sentinels

Page 48: Inflammation, role and types

• scattered in most connective tissues,

• also found in organs such as the liver

• spleen and lymph nodes

• central nervous system

• lungs

Page 49: Inflammation, role and types

• Together these cells comprise the so-called mononuclear phagocyte system, also known by the older name of reticulo-endothelial system

Page 50: Inflammation, role and types
Page 51: Inflammation, role and types

Lymphocytes

• mobilized to the setting of any specific immune stimulus

• as wel l as non-immune-mediated inflammation

Page 52: Inflammation, role and types
Page 53: Inflammation, role and types

Eosinophils

• characteristically found in inflammatory sites around parasitic infections

• or as part of immune reactions mediated by IgE, typically associated with allergies.

Page 54: Inflammation, role and types

Mast cells

• sentinel cells widely distributed in connective tissues throughout the body,

• participate in both acute and chronic inflammatory responses

• "armed" with IgE antibody specific for certain environmental antigens

Page 55: Inflammation, role and types

• Neutrophils are the classic hallmarks of acute inflammation, many forms of chronic inflammation may nevertheless continue to show extensive neutrophilic infiltrates

Page 56: Inflammation, role and types

References

• Robins, Basic Pathology, 8th Edition.


Recommended