Quotation from: Manual of SurgeryWritten by: Alexander Miles and Alexis Thomson |
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The introduction of a colony of micro-organisms is quickly followed by an accumulation of wandering cells, and proliferation of connective-tissue cells in the tissues at the site of infection. The various cells are attracted to the bacteria by a peculiar chemical or biological power known as _chemotaxis_, which seems to result from variations in the surface tension of different varieties of cells, probably caused by some substance produced by the micro-organisms. Changes in the blood vessels then ensue, the arteries becoming dilated and the rate of the current in them being for a time increased--_active hyperaemia_. Soon, however, the rate of the blood flow becomes slower than normal, and in course of time the current may cease (_stasis_), and the blood in the vessels may even coagulate (_thrombosis_). Coincidently with these changes in the vessels, the leucocytes in the blood of the inflamed part rapidly increase in number, and they become viscous and adhere to the vessel wall, where they may accumulate in large numbers. In course of time the leucocytes pass through the vessel wall--_emigration of leucocytes_--and move towards the seat of infection, giving rise to a marked degree of _local leucocytosis_. Through the openings by which the leucocytes have escaped from the vessels, red corpuscles may be passively extruded--_diapedesis of red corpuscles_. These processes are accompanied by changes in the endothelium of the vessel walls, which result in an increased formation of lymph, which transudes into the meshes of the connective tissue giving rise to an _inflammatory oedema_, or, if the inflammation is on a free surface, forming an _inflammatory exudate_. The quantity and characters of this exudate vary in different parts of the body, and according to the nature, virulence, and location of the organisms causing the inflammation. Thus it may be _serous_, as in some forms of synovitis; _sero-fibrinous_, as in certain varieties of peritonitis, the fibrin tending to limit the spread of the inflammation by forming adhesions; _croupous_, when it coagulates on a free surface and forms a false membrane, as in diphtheria; _haemorrhagic_ when mixed with blood; or _purulent_, when suppuration has occurred. The protective effects of the inflammatory reaction depend for the most part upon the transudation of lymph and the emigration of leucocytes. The lymph contains the opsonins which act on the bacteria and render them less able to resist the attack of the phagocytes, as well as the various protective antibodies which neutralise the toxins. The polymorph leucocytes are the principal agents in the process of phagocytosis (p. 22), and together with the other forms of phagocytes they ingest and destroy the bacteria.
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