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The Injury Response Process

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Change in hemodynamics, production of exudate, granular ... Phagocytosis and debridement. Release proteolytic enzymes and collagenase. Chemotactic attraction ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Injury Response Process


1
The Injury Response Process
2
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3
Stress
  • Influence the bodies physiological functions to
    provide best healing environment
  • Positive and negative
  • At the cellular level
  • Adapts
  • Alters and recovers
  • Dies

4
Trauma
  • Macro
  • Micro

5
Neurotransmitters
  • Acetylcholine
  • Increases permeability to Na K
  • Inhibitory to the Heart (Vagus nerve)
  • Dopamine
  • Epinephrine
  • Norepinephrine
  • Serotonin
  • Strong inhibitor
  • Thought to inhibit pain chronic
  • Mood behavior
  • Substance P
  • Produces pain
  • Peptide found in spinal cord pathways

6
Injury Process
  • Primary response
  • Tissue destruction
  • Secondary response
  • Hypoxia
  • Result of ischemia
  • Creates ATP shortage as a result of lack of oxygen

7
Inflammatory Response
  • Acute Inflammation
  • Short onset and duration
  • Change in hemodynamics, production of exudate,
    granular leukocytes
  • Chronic Inflammation
  • Long onset and duration
  • Presence of non-granular leukocytes and extensive
    scar tissue

8
The Healing Process
  • Inflammatory Response Phase
  • 0-14 days
  • Fibroblastic Repair Phase
  • 2 days-6 weeks
  • Maturation Remodeling Phase
  • 3 weeks-2 years
  • The Healing process is a continuum

9
Acute Inflammatory Response
  • Begins immediately following injury
  • Vascular (Hemodynamics) and cellular responses
  • Local Vasodilation (Rubor)
  • Fluid Leakage into extravascular spaces (Tumor)
  • Blocking of Lymphatic drainage (Calor)

10
Cardinal Signs of Inflammation
  • Rubor (redness)
  • Tumor (swelling)
  • Calor (heat)
  • Dolor (pain)
  • Functio laesa (loss of function)

11
Inflammation Cont.
  • Other cardinal signs of inflammation
  • Distension of tissue and chemical irritation of
    nerve endings this causes pain (Dolor)
  • Loss of Function
  • Acute response usually lasts between 24 and 48
    hours
  • Subacute phase is complete within 2 weeks

12
Inflammation Cont.
  • Phagocytosis
  • Destroys bacteria and clears debris
  • Essential for repair process to proceed further
  • Works through amoeboid action and diapedesis
  • Diapedesis outward movement of elements of the
    blood through intact vessel walls

13
Vascular Response
  • Trauma causes hemorrhage, vascular disruption,
    and cell death
  • Immediate vasoconstriction at and around injury
    site
  • Mediated by norepinephrine
  • Lasts from few seconds to few minutes
  • Continued constriction must be mediated by
    serotonin

14
Vascular Response Cont.
  • If Serotonin is released
  • Found in mast cells
  • Triggered by platelet adhesion to naked collagen,
    which is present in connective tissue
  • Collagen becomes exposed when injury occurs to
    blood vessel endothelial wall

15
Vascular Response cont.
  • Platelet adherence to collagen also causes
    release of ADP
  • Which in turn causes additional platelet
    adherence
  • This formation, at the site of injury along the
    endothelial wall, creates an unstable plug
  • This is a temporary slowing or stopping of blood

16
Vascular Response cont.
  • During initial vasoconstriction, opposing
    endothelial walls are pressed together
  • This contact causes a stickiness that will last
    long after active vasoconstriction (5 - 10) has
    started to relax

17
Cellular Mediators
  • Histamine
  • platelets, mast cells and basophils to enhance
    permeability and arterial dilation
  • Serotonin
  • provides for vasoconstriction
  • Bradykinin
  • plasma protease that enhances permeability and
    causes pain. Also chemotactic
  • Heparin
  • provided by mast cells and basophils to prevent
    coagulation
  • Leukotrienes and prostaglandins
  • located in cell membranes and develop through the
    arachadonic acid cascade
  • Leukotrienes alter permeability
  • Prostaglandin add and inhibit inflammation

18
Vascular Response cont.
  • Microtrauma causes the release of Hagemann factor
    XII
  • Which is an enzyme present in blood
  • Initiates clotting by converting prothrombin to
    thrombin which in turn converts fibrinogen to
    fibrin
  • Fibrin plugs seal damaged lymphatics and confine
    reaction to a localized area

19
Vascular Response cont.
  • Immediately after injury, leukocytes begin to
    adhere to endothelium of venules
  • Within 1 hour, entire endothelium margin covered
    with neutrophilic leukocytes. (neutrophilic
    margination)

20
Vascular Response cont.
  • Histamine is released from mast cells, basophils,
    and platelets
  • This causes vasodilatation and an increase in
    cell wall permeability to small molecular weight
    plasma proteins.
  • These are albumin, globulins, and fibrinogen
  • Transport protein
  • Plasma protein
  • Plasma cell to assist with clotting

21
Edema
  • Collection of fluid
  • Histamine action lasts less than 30
  • Transudate with fibrinogen then forms fibrin
    which in turn forms plugs for lymphatics and
    confines the inflammatory reaction
  • Other factors involved for continued permeability

22
The Cellular Reaction
  • Neutrophils
  • Phagocytosis and debridement
  • Release proteolytic enzymes and collagenase
  • Chemotactic attraction
  • 24 hours, max of several days

23
Mononuclear cells
  • Monocytes and Lymphocytes
  • Monocytes
  • When they get into the tissue spaces they are
    transformed into macrophage cells
  • This cell is considered the most important
    regulatory cell in the inflammatory response
  • The presence of the macrophage is essential to
    wound healing, it must be present in order for
    healing to occur

24
Macrophages cont.
  • Macrophages produce collagenase and proteoglycan
    degrading enzymes
  • Macrophage phagocytic activity most efficient
    with oxygen present
  • They tolerate hypoxic situations very well
  • Macrophages release fibronectin which attracts
    fibroblasts

25
Macrophages cont.
  • Play a role in localizing the inflammatory
    response
  • Help adhere fibroblasts to fibrin during the
    transition to the proliferative phase
  • This may enhance the deposition of collagen fibers

26
Platelets
  • Considered along with macrophages to be one of
    the most important regulatory cells
  • Releases platelet - derived growth factor (it
    attracts fibroblasts) also is shown that it
    attracts macrophages, monocytes, and neutrophils

27
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28
Prostaglandins
  • Cell membranes phospholipid content is broken
    down into phospholipase A2
  • results in the formation of Arachidonic acid
  • Oxidation of arachidonic acid produces a series
    of substances called leukotrienes
  • alter capillary permeability during the
    inflammatory reaction
  • Arachadonic acid is converted by COX through a
    series of steps to Prostaglandins

29
Prostaglandins cont.
  • Pgs have very important and multiple roles in the
    inflammatory phase
  • De - activation of COX by steroids and NSAIDs
    (such as aspirin) is counterproductive to the
    resolution of the acute inflammatory response
  • but may contribute in a chronic inflammatory
    response

30
Chronic Inflammation
  • May last for several years or months
  • May be from unresolved acute inflammation
  • Not characterized by the cardinal signs of
    inflammation
  • Repeated microtrauma or presence of a foreign
    substance
  • Characterized by the replacement of leukocytes
    with macrophages, lymphocytes, and plasma cells
  • Associated with wounds that are habitually sealed
    by necrotic tissue

31
Repair (Proliferation) Phase
  • Begins within 72 hours following injury
  • Granulation
  • Requires the presence of fibroblasts,
    myofibroblasts, endothelial cells, and is
    regulated by growth factors
  • Re-epithelialization
  • Neovascularization
  • Begins on periphery
  • Contraction (Fibroplasia)
  • Weak type III collagen
  • High water content

32
Repair Phase cont.
  • Granulation tissue formation proceeds when debris
    removed
  • macrophages and fibroblasts must be present
  • gel matrix of collagen, hyaluronic acid, and
    fibronectin nourish the macrophages and
    fibroblasts through the newly formed vascular
    network

33
Repair
  • Re-epithelialization occurs through leap frogging
  • best if hydrated
  • low friction
  • initiated by loss of contact

34
Repair
  • Fibroplasia
  • fibroblasts change into myofibroblasts
  • contract to close wound
  • FGF responsible for change
  • collagen production begins about 5 days after
    myofibroblast migration

35
Maturation Phase
  • May last a year or longer
  • Type III to Type I
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