Infiltrate Inflammatory

The occurrence of an inflammatory infiltrate occurs when pathogenic microorganisms enter the body, from which an infectious inflammatory process has already developed. Thus, the cause of the development of infiltrative inflammation is not the infection as such, but its development, accompanied by the death of microbes. Cells released by dead organisms into the surrounding tissue enter the blood and spread throughout the body. The developing inflammatory syndrome threatens the normal functioning of various organs and systems of the body, primarily the liver, spleen and lymph nodes. As a result, the damaged area is covered with a swollen connective tissue membrane, which penetrates into the depths and grows. As the disease progresses, edema may be complicated by numerous indurations or infiltrates.