Wild Card
Inflammation and Healing
Infection
Immunity
Wild Card
100

Fungal causing lung infection 

Histoplasma

100

Types of Healing 

Resolution, regeneration, and replacement 

100

Number one way to prevent spread of infection

Hand Washing
100

Release of histamine and other chemical mediators

Causes inflammation 

IgE

AllergEEEEEEE

100

Growth of normal bacteria in all regions of the body

Normal Flora 

200

1st to secrete immune response in B lymphocytes 

IgM 

Call you MOM 1st when you're in trouble 

200

formation of unique antibodies 

3rd line of defense

200

Source of the infection, ex personal, animal, bacteria 

Reservoir 

200

Vaccine administered, no illness present but antibodies formed  

Artificial Active 

200
Name 3 ways a pain gate can close 

1. sensory stimuli move along competing pathways 

2. brain produces outgoing transmissions through reticular systems (efferent) 

3. brain releases opiate like chemicals 

300

Body's immune system attacks normal tissue due to the production of antibodies that attack healthy tissue. Hallmark sign is a butterfly rash

Systemic Lupus Erythematosus (SLE)

300

Describe the acute and systemic effects of inflammation 

Acute: redness, swelling, warmth, pain 


Systemic: fever, headache, anorexia, malaise, changes in blood (leukocytosis, increased CRP and ESR)

 
300

Lacks cell wall (not affected by antimicrobial drugs), common cause of pneumonia 

Mycoplasma 

300
Antibodies passed directly from mother to baby for temporary protection 

Natural Passive Immunity 

300

Transmitted via droplets suspended in air 

Aerosol  

400

Describe the steps of a closed gate response 

1. painful stimulation 

2. interneuron activated by efferent impulses from brain or afferent impulses from touch stimulus 

3. interneuron released by enkephalin 

4. opiate receptors blocked by enkephalin 

5. substance P neurotransmitter not released 

6. gate closed, transmission blocked on tract

400

How does capillary exchange differ during an inflammatory response? 

Permeability is increased, allows larger molecules such as histamine, bradykinin, and cytokines to be released. 


Fluid and protein leakage causes edema. 

Neutrophils and macrophages enter the tissue to combat infection or injury. 

400

populations with decreased host resistance 

immunocompromised, infants, older populations 


Examples of immunocompromised populations? 

400

In order, list the three types of medication classes used to treat anaphylaxis shock and what they do

Epinephrine: causes vasoconstriction to reverse the drop in blood pressure, improves circulation and oxygenation

Corticosteroids: reduces immune response and stabilizes the vascular system  

Antihistamine: block the tissue response of histamine 

400

A patient suffering from a burn will most likely face which two complications 

Infection and inability to self regulate body temperature 

500

antigen-antibody complexes deposit in tissues, such as blood vessels or the kidneys. These complexes activate the complement system, leading to inflammation, tissue damage, and recruitment of inflammatory cells. The inflammation can lead to damage in the affected tissues.

Type III hypersensitivity 

500

explain the difference between each degree of burns

1st degree: only affects outer layer of the skin, redness, pain and no blisters noted at sight. EX: Sunburn 

2nd Degree: involves the epidermis and dermis, skin has blisters and possible swelling 

3rd Degree: entire epidermis and dermis is destroyed, subcutaneous tissue is damaged. Appearance is blackened and charred. 

500

These are components of the bacterial cell wall, particularly in Gram-negative bacteria that can trigger harmful immune responses, leading to fever and septic shock

Endotoxins

500

Attached to B cells and activates B cells 

IgD 

500

State the function of each common diagnostic test for infection and what is their purpose 

1. WBC 

2. ESR/CRP

3. Blood Culture 

4. Urine Culture 

1. increased white blood cell count indicate the presence of infection 

2. elevated CRP and ESR indicate increased inflammatory responses 

3. Blood cultures are used to detect bacteria or other pathogens spreading throughout the blood stream

4. a UA is used to locate any UTI