Chronic inflammation

Description

Medicine Quiz on Chronic inflammation, created by Maddy Wallace on 04/12/2017.
Maddy Wallace
Quiz by Maddy Wallace, updated more than 1 year ago
Maddy Wallace
Created by Maddy Wallace over 6 years ago
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Resource summary

Question 1

Question
What defines chronic inflammation?
Answer
  • Long term injury
  • Inflammation
  • Repair
  • All of the above

Question 2

Question
[blank_start]Macrophages[blank_end] and [blank_start]granulation[blank_end] tissue are characteristic features. Macrophages come in many different states in chronic inflammation, highlighting their wide range of functions in protecting the body: killing and clearing ([blank_start]phagocytosis[blank_end]), production of [blank_start]cytokines[blank_end], acute phase reactions and [blank_start]antigen[blank_end] presentation
Answer
  • Macrophages
  • granulation
  • phagocytosis
  • cytokines
  • antigen

Question 3

Question
[blank_start]Tuberculosis[blank_end] is caused by mycobacterium which has a protective coat so the stimulus cannot be removed. Granulomas form around the pathogen [blank_start]Amyloidosis[blank_end] is aggregation of misfolded proteins causing atrophy [blank_start]Cystisis[blank_end] is bladder inflammation. Urinary catheters can introduce infection and leads to incontinence and confusion.
Answer
  • Tuberculosis
  • Amyloidosis
  • Cystisis
  • sarcoidosis

Question 4

Question
 [blank_start]Labile[blank_end] cells: always proliferating so regenerate – epithelia such as skin, GI tract  [blank_start]Stable[blank_end] cells: do not normally proliferate but can do so after injury – liver, kidney  [blank_start]Permanent[blank_end]: cannot regenerate so must scar – neurones, heart muscle
Answer
  • Labile
  • Stable
  • Permanent

Question 5

Question
Regeneration can be stimulated by insoluble growth factors
Answer
  • True
  • False

Question 6

Question
In regeneration soluble transcription factors regulate DNA transcription from cascade of events which can result in:
Answer
  • apoptosis
  • proliferation
  • angiogenesis
  • prevention of apoptosis
  • meiosis
  • tumour formation

Question 7

Question
Another signal for regeneration is [blank_start]physical[blank_end] cell-cell and cell-matrix interactions via the ECM and cell junctions, mediated by [blank_start]integrin[blank_end] proteins (we touched on this in Topic 1) that again produce a cascade.
Answer
  • chemical
  • long-distance
  • physical
  • integrin
  • interferon
  • integral
  • interleukin
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