Local reaction of living tissues to injury or illness, including burns, pneumonia, leprosy, tuberculosis, and rheumatoid arthritis.
Its major signs are heat, redness, swelling, and pain. The process begins with brief contraction of nearby arterioles (see capillaries with blood, from which fluid, plasma proteins, and leukocytes pass into the injured tissues, causing swelling as they attack the cause of injury. Initial acute inflammation can have any of four outcomes: resolution (return to normal), organization (new tissue buildup; see scar ), suppuration (pus formation; see abscess ), or chronic inflammation. Sometimes treatment
including antibiotics for bacteria, or surgical removal of an irritating foreign body
can eliminate the cause. If not, anti-inflammatory drugs (e.g., {{link=cortisone">cortisone or aspirin ) may be given, or simple remedies (e.g., hot or cold compresses) may be applied.