b'R E C O G N I Z I N G T H E P A T T E R N SAcute inflammation. See if this sounds familiar.Phase 1, the inflammatory phase, is predominated by phagocytes. Neutrophils arrive first, phagocytose pathogens, and die in place. They also release inflammatory cytokines that summon macrophages. Macrophages arrive next, phagocytose the remaining pathogens and the neutrophils, clearing the field for fibroblasts. During phase 2, the proliferative phase, fibroblasts lay down granulation tissue, replacing any missing tissue with collagen, scar.NOW, TAKE A LOOK AT THISMYOCARDIAL ACUTE HEPATITIS SURGICAL WOUND INFARCTION HEALING Myocytes die and.Hepatocytes die and. Keratinocytes die and. Acute inflammation Acute inflammation Acute inflammationMyocytes cannot regenerate,Hepatocytes are intenselyKeratinocytes are constantly so scar, compromisingregenerative, so only scar afterreplaced. Scar is minimized cardiac function. decades of inflammation. by approximating the wound. Think of how much time students would save if instead of memorizing each disease above, they learned the one pattern that applies to all of them. This is what OnlineMedEd does for students across the board. We teach the patternsthe connectionsfrom a single, unified perspective.So students can spend less time memorizing and more time getting it. 9'