Introduction

  • Chronic inflammation may:
    • Follow on from an unresolved acute inflammation.
    • Be chronic from the beginning.
      • Is usually of slow onset and long duration, and very insidious in nature.
      • There is a slow progressive destruction of the original tissue.
  • Chronic inflammation is characterised by cellular infiltration and proliferation of local connective tissue.
    • Often found around focal areas of necrosis.

Cells

  • The principal inflammatory cells involved are lymphocytes and macrophages.
    • Fibroblasts and vascular endothelium also have important roles.

Accumulation of Macrophages

  • Under certain circumstances, macrophages accumulate.
    1. Impaired digestive ability of the macrophages to cope with foreign material.
      • E.g. thorns, sutures, grit etc.
    2. The irritant being able to coat itself with host antigens.
    3. The irritant's own coating being impervious to digestion by the macrophage.
      • E.g. tubercle bacillus and fungi.

Fibroblasts

  • Derived from local connective tissue cells.
  • Involved in the organisation of damaged tissue.
    • Replacement repair.

Endothelium

  • As well as fibroplasia (organisation) and macrophages mopping up debris, the vascular endothelium proliferates into the organising tissue.
  • Endothelium is a prominent component of the 'pyogenic membrane’ in abscess formation.
    • The vessels bring neutrophils into the centre of the abscess.