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office_hours:inflammation:episode_2

Inflammation — Episode 2: The Arachidonic Acid Pathway

This episode explains the central chemical engine of inflammation.

Most everyday drugs patients recognize — ibuprofen, aspirin, steroids, montelukast — all work somewhere on this single pathway.

If Episode 1 was the map, this is the highway everything travels on.


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📄 Download Slides (PDF)
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Step 1 — Membrane Activation

All inflammation begins with cell membrane phospholipids.

Damage or immune activation triggers:

Phospholipase A₂

This releases:

Arachidonic Acid

No arachidonic acid = no inflammatory mediators

Drug that blocks this step:

  • Corticosteroids

This is why steroids feel dramatically stronger than NSAIDs.


Step 2 — Two Competing Pathways

Once arachidonic acid exists, it must choose a direction:

Pathway Enzyme Products What They Do
COX Pathway Cyclooxygenase Prostaglandins & Thromboxane Pain, fever, swelling
LOX Pathway Lipoxygenase Leukotrienes Bronchoconstriction, mucus, asthma

Every common anti-inflammatory drug targets one of these branches.


COX Pathway (Pain & Fever)

Produces Prostaglandins (PGE₂, PGI₂) and Thromboxane (TXA₂)

Clinical effects:

  • Pain sensitization
  • Fever generation
  • Vasodilation
  • Platelet activation

Blocked by:

  • Aspirin
  • COX-2 selective inhibitors

Patients experience:

  • ↓ pain
  • ↓ fever
  • ↓ swelling

But NOT immune suppression.


LOX Pathway (Airway Inflammation)

Produces Leukotrienes (LTB₄, LTC₄, LTD₄, LTE₄)

Clinical effects:

  • Bronchoconstriction
  • Airway edema
  • Mucus secretion
  • Eosinophil recruitment

Blocked by:

Important insight:

Asthma is not a prostaglandin disease — it is primarily a leukotriene disease.


Why Steroids Are Different

Steroids block:

Phospholipase A₂ (upstream of BOTH pathways)

So they reduce:

  • Prostaglandins
  • Leukotrienes
  • Cytokines
  • Immune cell migration

NSAIDs turn off one faucet Steroids shut off the water main


Clinical Consequences

Drug Class What Improves What Does NOT Improve
Antihistamines Itch & allergy Pain & arthritis
NSAIDs Pain & fever Asthma control
Leukotriene blockers Asthma Arthritis pain
Steroids Almost everything Long-term safety

Understanding failures becomes predictable.


Key Takeaway

You cannot treat leukotriene disease with prostaglandin drugs — and you cannot treat immune disease with symptom drugs.


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office_hours/inflammation/episode_2.txt · Last modified: by andrew2393cns