C) Unit Nine – Flashcards
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Unlock answersInnate Body Defenses-1st line of defense A. Non Aggressive Types of Defense: |
1) Intact skin: physical and chemical barrier 2) Mucous membrane: hair, cilated cells, tears, saliva, & mucous 3) Normal Flora: "barrier" and bacteriocin prod,--> (chemical product) 4) Gastrointestinal Tract: stomach w/ low pH, digestive juices, & bile |
Innate Body Defenses-1st line of defense A. Non Aggressive Types of Defense: cont. |
5) Blood Brain Barrier: ependymal cells and astrocytes (2nd line- microglial cells aka phagocytes in the regio 6) Oxygen Tension: aerobic~lungs & anaerobic~intestines *keep certain micr. out* 7) Iron Levels: require Fe++, during infection-->hypoferremia which is iron levels slightly low causing certain micrb. to die bc lack of iron. 8) Defecation & Vomiting: ridding microbes |
Innate Body Defenses-1st line of defense A. Non Aggressive Types of Defense: cont. |
9) Fever: release of pyrogens Benefits of a "low grade" fever- Increase in the following= immunce mechanism, phagocytes, interferon, & growth of certain microbes |
Innate Body Defenses-1st line of defense B) Aggressive Types of Defense: 3 types |
1) Lysozyme: *going after/breakdown of* gram positive bacteria - Found in~ tears, saliva, prespiration & granules of neutrophils - Resistant of lysozyme~ capsules bc of slippery coating 2) Sebum: fatty acids, toxic to gram negatives |
Innate Body Defenses-1st line of defense B) Aggressive Types of Defense: continued... |
3) Cydal Agents: a) Compliment= gram neg. & virues - Serum protein - Exists in "inactive" state - Actived when body temp rises - Once activated, it attaches to the microbe & destroys it b) Properdin - In serum & destroys various microbes - Rare Blood Disorder= paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria
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B) Aggressive Types of Defense: Cydal agents continued... |
c) Interferon= antiviral protein - Protects uninfected cells from being infected by the virus -Given in large doses for various therapeutic reasons (Hep B&C) e) Plakins= produced by platlets f) Lactoferrin= breask milk, tears & neutrophils g) Transferrin= serum productions, regulates the absorption, transport, & metablism of Fe++ |
Phagocystosis Defenses- 2nd Line of Defense A) Phagocytosis Def. & Stages: |
- Cells that are capable of ingesting microbes, debris, and other foreign matter Phagocytosis= 5 Steps: 1) Chemotaxis- move to area of infection 2) Adherance- *Opsonization- opsonin protein sticky 3) Ingestion- Phagocytic vacuoles or phagosome 4) Digestion- lysosomes 5) Release |
Phagocystosis Defenses- 2nd Line of Defense B) Types of Phagocytic Cells: 2 types Gran. & Agran |
TYPE 1=Wandering or Free Phagocytes: Granulocytes= -Neutrophils (most abd) -Eosinophils -Basophils (lst abd)-*phagocytic* Agranulocytes= -Monocytes - Lymphocytes- *Ab. prod. or humoral defenses*
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Phagocystosis Defenses- 2nd Line of Defense B) Types of Phagocytic Cells: NEUTROPHILS |
1) Neutrophils: 60-70% total WBC (12 microns) Very pathogenic- 1st WBC @ infection Scavenger cells Granules- lysozyme & lactoferrin (reg. iron levels) Leukocytosis- acute infections and neutrophilia (Incr. in WBC) Leukopenia/neutropenia- Decrease in WBC
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Phagocystosis Defenses- 2nd Line of Defense B) Types of Phagocytic Cells: EOSINOPHILS |
2) Eosinophils: 2-4% total WBC (13 microns) Some phagocytic activity Role in allergies (hypersensitivity) Granules- histamine (1/3 of blood supply & can vasodilate) Eosinophila- allergies and parasitic infections |
Phagocystosis Defenses- 2nd Line of Defense B) Types of Phagocytic Cells: BASOPHILS & MONOCYTES |
3) Basophils: 0.5-1% WBC Some phagocytic activity Important role in graft rejection and viral immunity Granules- heparin, serotonin, histamine (1/3 blood supply)
4) Monocytes: 3-8% of total WBC -Largest WBC- *16-20 microns* Not phagocytic while in blood but a macrophage when it enters tissue -Monocytosis- certain bacterial infections (TB, rickettsials infections), protozoa, & fungal infections |
Phagocystosis Defenses- 2nd Line of Defense B) Types of Phagocytic Cells: |
TYPE TWO= Fixed Phagocytes or Histiocytes: a) Alveolar macrophages- lungs b) Kupffer cells- liver c) Lymphocytic macrophages- lymph nodes d) Microglial cells- brain & CNS e) Osteoclasts: bones
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Inflammatory Response- Definition: Inflammatory Response- General Body Reactions: |
- Sum of reactions in the body incited by injury 1) Vasodilation: increase in diameter of blood vessels, vascular permeability, blood flow from capillaries to damaged tissue, edema swelling Types- bradykin, kinin, histamine (eosino. & baso.), & sertonin (platelets & baso.) |
Inflammatory Response- General Body Reactions: contin. |
2) Hemostatic Plug: fibrin clot (wall-off) 3) Puss formation: dead cellls & body fluids 4) Chemotaxis: phagocytes move to injured area 5) Margination: WBC cling to the lining of blood vessels 6) Diapedesis: phagocytic WBC move from blood to tissue, fever incites this process 7) Neutrophils: 1st to arrive w/in hrs, 4-5 fold increase 8) Monocytes: arrive in 12hrs, enter tissue & become macrophages 9) Eosinophils & Basophils appear 10) Antibody formation |
Inflammatory Response- Tissue Repair: |
1) Fibrinolysis: plasminogen converted to plasmin which breaks down fibrin clot
2) Fibroblasts: formation of scar tissue |