a) Histamine

– Vasoactive amine that causes dilation of post-capillary venules

– Binds specific receptors on the other cells

– DEGRANULATION PRODUCT

b) Chemotactic factors

– Neutrophil chemotactic factor

– Eosinophil chemotactic factor

– DEGRANULATION PRODUCT

c) Prostaglandins and leukotrienes

– Products of arachidonic acid pathway

– Induce pain, inhibited by ASA/NSAIDS

– Similar effect to histamine

– Can also act as hormones (chem)

– SYNTHESIS PRODUCT

d) Platelet-activating factor

– Similar effect to leukotrienes + platelet activation

– SYNTHESIS PRODUCT

Endothelium

▪ Lines blood vessels

▪ Attached to underlying connective tissue matrix

▪ Critical in pathophysiology of inflammation

▪ Interact with circulating cells, platelets, plasma proteins

▪ Endothelial injury initiates platelet adherence

▪ Release/regulate inflammatory mediators

▪ Simple squamous cells lining blood vessel; have tight

junction which can be loosened

Platelets

▪ Activated by rough endothelium, tissue destruction and inflammation

▪ Activation leads to interaction with coagulation factors and activates the cascade

– The cascade is only activated when there is tissue factor release

▪ They have no nucleus

▪ Mother cell is megakaryocyte in bone marrow

▪ Normal count: 150,000-450,000 /L

▪ Life span: 8-11 day

Pathology of Acute Inflammation

▪ Vascular changes

– Vessels become more porous and leak fluid

▪ “Acute” refers to the increase in neutrophils as part of the inflammatory response

Types of Exudative Fluids

▪ In acute inflammation there is a leakage of circulating fluid into tissue (exudative fluids)

▪ The four types of exudative fluids are:

a) Serous:

– watery. Indicates early inflammation

b) Fibrinous:

– Thick, clotted. Indicates advanced inflammation.

c) Purulent (suppurate):

– Pus. Indicates bacterial infection

d) Hemorrhagic:

– Bloody; Indicates bleeding

Manifestations of Acute Inflammation

Local

▪ Heat, swelling, redness, pain, loss of function

Systemic

▪ Fever

– Caused by exogenous and endogenous pyrogens

– Pyrogens act directly on the hypothalamus

▪ Leukocytosis

– Increased numbers of circulating leukocytes

– Normal count: 4-11 x 109/L

▪ General lab markers inflammation: ESR, CRP

– ESR: erythrocyte sedimentation rate. Basic non-specific test. Examines the sedimentation of red cell mass vertically over time

– CRP: C-reactive protein measured in blood. Pathology of Chronic inflammation, acute phase reactant

▪ Acute inflammation lasting ~2 weeks (more neutrophils infiltration) and chronic lasts longer (more lymphocytes infiltration)

Chronic Inflammation

Causes of Chronic Inflammation:

▪ Unresolved acute inflammation

▪ Microbe surviving inside macrophage

▪ Persistence of stimulus

– Toxins, chemicals, particulate matter, or physical irritants

Pathophysiological features of chronic inflammation

▪ Dense infiltration of lymphocytes, fibroblasts and macrophages

– If macrophages are unable to protect the host from tissue damage, the body will attempt to wall off and isolate the infected area, thus forming a granuloma.

– TNF-alpha primarily drives the formation of a granuloma.

▪ Giant cell infiltration and granuloma formation

– When macrophages form, they can make a giant cell. Which is active phagocyte that can engulf very large particles.

– The giant cell and epithelioid cell form the centre of the granuloma and are surrounded by wall of lymphocytes.

▪ Simultaneous destruction and healing of tissues

Examples of chronic inflammatory conditions:

▪ TB

▪ Rheumatoid arthritis

Wound Healing

The process where the skin (or organ/tissue) repair themselves after injury

▪ Requires healthy blood vessels and connective tissue

Three phases of wound healing:

I. Inflammation (including coagulation) (1-2 days)

▪ Infiltration of cells of inflammatory response, phagocytosis of debris

▪ Release of cytokines and inflammatory mediators

II. Proliferation and new tissue formation (3-4 days)

▪ Angiogenesis (new blood vessel formation)

▪ Fibroblasts grow and form new connective tissue (granulation tissue)

▪ Re-epithelialization: epithelium crawl to provide a cover for new tissue

III. Remodeling and maturation (few weeks – 2 years)

▪ Collagen is remodeled and realigned along tension line

▪ Myofibroblasts decrease wound size (wound contraction)

▪ Un-necessary cells undergo apoptosis

Dysfunctional/Complications of Wound Healing

Dysfunctional inflammation

▪ Caused by:

– Bleeding, hypovolemia, poor inflammatory response

▪ Results in:

– Fibrous adhesion/infection

Deficient scar:

▪ Caused by:

– Inadequate granulation tissue

▪ Results in:

– Wound dehiscence, rupture, increase risk of infection

Excessive scar:

▪ Caused by:

– Impaired collagen matrix remodeling

▪ Results in:

– Keloid/hypertrophic scar

Impaired epithelialization

▪ Caused by:

– Steroids, hypoxemia, nutritional deficiencies

▪ Results in:

– Incomplete healing

Impaired contraction

▪ Deficient: decreases engraftment in skin grafts

▪ Excessive (contracture): impairs joint function post burns

Others:

▪ Calcification

▪ Pigmentation

▪ Pain

▪ Incisional hernia

Pathophysiological conditions of impaired wound healing

Diabetes Mellitus

▪ Worst of chronic conditions that can impair wound healing

▪ Impaired due to:

– Neuropathy

– Vascularization (angiopathy)

– Impaired coagulation

– Hyperglycemia impairs cell function

▪ Stress

▪ Extremes of age

▪ Disease involving hypoxemia

▪ Obesity

▪ Alcoholism

▪ Poor nutrition

▪ Smoking

▪ Medications

– Steroids

– Chemotherapy

Wound Healing and Extremes of Age

Neonates

▪ Transient depression of inflammatory and immune function

▪ Inefficient neutrophils chemotaxis

▪ Complement deficiency

▪ Increased susceptibility to sepsis

Elderly:

▪ Impaired function of innate immune cells (eg. Phagocytes)

▪ Increased susceptibility to infections

▪ Impaired inflammation likely due to:

– Associated chronic illness: DM, CVD, etc.

– Polypharmacy

▪ Impaired healing due to loss of regenerative ability of skin