Before the inflammation stage, bleeding needs to occur. The muscle tissue is destroyed through a direct or indirect cause to the muscle. Blood is initially released into the area due to ruptured blood vessels. Inflammation is the bodys defensive system in response to an injury, it is a non-specific response (Hertel, 1997) that will prepare the wound for healing. This phase will happen a few hours post injury (After the bleeding phase has ended) (Watson, 2012). The inflammation stage can be split into two cascades: Vascular cascade and the Cellular cascade. The vascular cascade begins with vasodilation, this happens after vasoconstriction in the bleeding phase. Vasodilation will stress as far as opening previously dormant capillaries. (Reference) The increasing blood flow to the area is due to the vasopermeability caused by histamine (Watson, 2012) and will allow protein rich plasma into the interstitial space along with water (due to osmosis). This then assists in the cellular cascade as cytokines stimulate the white blood cells such as neutrophils and macrophages to enter through the walls to the damaged area.…
Acute inflammation is a brief response to injury or illness that lasts for a short period. It is a normal action for your body to take when it incurs injury and falls out of homeostasis. The acute inflammation is the result of cytokines signaling the release of plasma proteins, white blood cells, and capillaries near the injury to expand (Heuther & McCance, 2011). The plasma proteins cover a wide range of duties. They serve to stop bleeding and fight off pathogens. This is one of the bodies…
Inflammation and Related Implications Acute Inflammation Acute inflammation is a type of immune response that is short term in nature, usually lasting for hours or days. This type of inflammation can happen relatively quickly and is characterized by symptoms such as: warmth, redness in the affected area, pain, swelling and in severe cases, loss of function in the affected or injured area. In most cases, the stimulus causing the inflammatory response can be resolved quickly and the body can heal…
You know inflammation is bad. But do you know just how bad it is and that it affects every single aspect of your health? Inflammation is at the root cause of all pain and disease. It is responsible for arthritis pain and stiffness, obesity, diabetes, heart disease, stroke, thyroid issues, cancer and more. Most of us, at one time or another in our lives, will suffer from the effects of inflammation. Even sadder, most will turn to traditional medicine and be prescribed medications that will only…
A1: Acute and Chronic inflammation differ in many ways. For example, acute inflammation as blatant as it is, acute inflammation is short, only lasting from a few minutes to days. On the other hand, chronic inflammation, is longer, lasting around days to even years. Furthermore, acute inflammations deal with fluid and plasma oozing. In addition, to leukocytes leaving to the extravascular tissues, which are mainly habited by neutrophils. Chronic inflammation, additionally, is associated with…
Inflammation is an essential part and highly regulated response to injury that promotes healing and provides protection against infection. Inflammation is frequently painful and hot, which can be easily controlled by nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs. In 2012, 98 million NSAIDs were prescribed in the U.S. (“Treating Osteoarthritis and Pain” www.consumerreports.com) NSAIDs are commonly used to treat pain and reduce fever and inflammation by reducing the amount of prostaglandins the body makes.…
Inflammation is a good thing. It is the natural way your body responds to threats such as infections or wounds. We have all seen inflammation at work when we have pain and redness at an injury. We say it looks inflamed, and it literally is, because injury activates the inflammatory response. When is inflammation a problem? When inflammation lasts for long periods of time, we call it chronic, and it can cause problems. Some common causes of chronic inflammation include allergies, autoimmune…
Chronic Inflammation: What causes it, Why Is It Unhealthy, How Do We Know If We Have It, and How Do We Reduce It? By Dr. Keith Kantor Inflammation is our body's response to outside threats like stress, toxic chemicals, viruses, and bacteria. When the immune system senses one of the dangers, it activates certain proteins meant to protect cells and tissues. Normally inflammation serves as a friend (a sore throat for example). If the immune system overreacts, the inflammation can be turned against…
The inflammatory response is the body's natural response that happens straight away following tissue damage. The main functions are to protect the body against harmful substances, dispose of dead or dying tissue and to promote the renewal of normal tissue. There are some signs of Inflammation are a lot of pain because of the chemicals released by damaged cells. Another sign is swelling because of an influx of fluid into the damaged area. One more sign is redness which is due to vasodilation-…
The chronic inflammation is slow onset reaction which needs days to start. However, once it is started, it is a long duration reaction and is associated with more tissue destruction. The reaction needs lymphocytes and macrophages, and the proliferation of blood vessels and the deposition of connective tissue are also existed in the response. What is more, it is lack of local and systemic signs and is always severe and progressive, and may causes tissue injury and fibrosis. While the acute…