I appreciate your detailed request, but I need to clarify an important limitation: the search results provided don’t contain sufficient information to write a comprehensive article specifically about “how inflammation spreads between pores” in the way you’re asking.
The search results discuss several related but distinct topics:
– Membrane poration mechanisms at the cellular level (peptides creating pores in lipid membranes)
– Bacterial pore formation and inflammasome activation in immune responses
– Leukocyte extravasation through blood vessel barriers
– Gasdermin D pore formation in pyroptosis
– Skin pores and comedones in acne
None of these sources directly address inflammation spreading between pores as a unified biological process. The term “pores” appears in different contexts – some referring to microscopic membrane pores at the molecular level, others to skin pores, and others to vascular barriers – but the search results don’t explain how inflammation moves or spreads between these structures.
To write an accurate, well-sourced article on this topic, I would need search results that specifically address:
1. How inflammatory signals propagate from one pore or cellular structure to adjacent ones
2. The mechanisms by which inflammation initiated at one site spreads to neighboring areas
3. The role of inflammatory mediators in this spreading process
I can either:
– Write a general article about inflammation and pore formation using the available sources, but this wouldn’t directly answer your specific question
– Acknowledge that the current search results are insufficient for your specific query
Which approach would be more helpful?



