Inflammation
Inflammation 2.0
Inflammation 3.0
Inflammation 4.0
100

Define inflammation

An immunologic defense against tissue injury, infection or allergy 

100

What role do neutrophils play in inflammation? What are band cells? What are they involved in?

- involved in phagocytosis

-primary component of exudate with bacterial infections, acute responses

-Band cells: immature neutrophils 

100

What are cytokines? where are they found and what do they do? 

Cytokines are small proteins found in macrophages and T cells. Some are pro-inflammatory and can increase fever. 

100

What does the kinin system do? 

Produces kinins, including bradykinin, potent vasodilators and is involved in pain sensation. 

200

What does inflammation overlap with? What are the positive consequences? What are the negative consequences? 

-overlaps with immunity

-Positive consequences: restitution of functioning cells, fibrous repair when cells unable to be stored

-Negative consequences: overly severe inflammatory response, development of chronic inflammation, autoimmune diseases, and hypersensitivity reactions. 

200

What role do eosinophils play in inflammation? What is their function? 

Defend against parasitic infections and respond to allergic reactions. 

200

What are the three types of plasma protein systems? 

Complement, Coagulation, and Kinin

200

Negative feedback system- what does the HPA axis do? 

Releases glucocorticoids and anti-inflammatory cytokines

300

What role do lymphocytes play in inflammation? 

-often present in chronic inflammation; most prominent when viral antigens are present; NK cells are able to kill viral cells without prior exposure. 

300

What role do basophils and mast cells play in inflammation? What is their primary function and where are they located? 

Primary function for both: release histamine

Location: Basophils circulate in blood vessels while mast cells are found in connective tissue near blood vessels.  

300

What are prostaglandins? What are they responsible for? 

Prostaglandins are lipid mediators responsible for vasodilation, promoting increased permeability, and chemotaxis

300
What are some laboratory tests used for inflammation? 
White blood cell count, neutrophil count (shift to the left - greater number of bands), basophil count, monocyte count, lymphocyte count, C-Reactive protein (CRP), and Erythrocyte Sedimentation Rate (ESR) 
400

What role do monocytes play in inflammation? 

-Macrophages: found in tissues; have receptor proteins that locate antigens; see 24 hours after acute response and in chronic infections. 

-Dendritic Cells: Antigen-presenting cells to T-cells as part of adaptive/acquired immunity 

400

What are the three key chemical mediators of inflammation? 

Histamine, Cytokine, and Prostaglandins

400

What does the coagulation system do? What activates it? 

Cytokines activate this system; it stimulates the production of platelets that adhere to altered surface and form hemostatic clots. 
400

Negative Feedback system- what does the SNS portion do? 

Releases norepinephrine to decrease amount of pro-inflammatory cytokines

500

What are the three types of Leukocytes (WBC)? What are the different types of white blood cells ?

-Lymphocytes: B cells, T cells, Natural killer cells

-Granulocytes: neutrophils, eosinophils, basophils, and mast cells

-Monocytes: macrophages and dendritic cells 

500

Where are histamines found? What are they and what do they do? 

Found in mast cells and basophils 

-Histamine is a vasoactive amine that is quickly released and results in vasodilation and increased vascular permeability. 

500

What does the complement system do? 

produces a cascade that directly destroys pathogens and can increase components of inflammation response 

500

Negative feedback system- what does the PNS portion do? 

Cholinergic anti-inflammatory pathway, decreases neutrophil activation. 

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