B Cell Defects (Humoral Immunodeficiencies) Flashcards

1
Q

the adaptive immune system can be broken down into ___ and ___ processes

A

humoral and cellular lines.

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2
Q

combined immunodeficiencies are aka

A

hyper IgM syndromes

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3
Q

3 ways antibodies work

A
  1. opsonization to induce death via phagocytosis
  2. attack by complement
  3. neutralize microbes (bind receptor on a virus required for cell invasion)
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4
Q

agammaglobulinemia

A

abnomral B cell maturation resulting in low B cell numbers. no B cells = no antibodies

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5
Q

CVID, selective antibody deficiency or hyper-igM syndromes:

A

B cells are present, but can’t make antibodies. There is a defect in the ability for B cells to produce antibodies.

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6
Q

Hyper IgM syndromes, CVID has which mechanism of humoral immunodeficiencies?

A

a defect in the communication of T cells with B cells to rpdouce antibody. B cells are present and can make antibody, but can’t get the signal to do it.

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7
Q
A
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8
Q

clinical presentation of someone with humoral immunodeficiency

A

clinical presentation

  1. recurrent sinopulmonary infections(sinusitis, otitis media, pneumonia)
  2. sepsis with diarrhea (giardia, rotavirus), meningoencephalitis
  3. neutropenia and other autoimmune cytopenias
  4. malignancy
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9
Q

when does humoral immunodeficiency usually present?

A

after 6 months ofa ge when maternal Ab titers wane. can present in late childhood or even in adult hood (CVID)

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10
Q

Normal immunoglobulin levels for healthy neonates

A

low/absent IgM and IgA,

adult level IgG by 3rd trimester.

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11
Q

what is transient hypogammaglobulinemia of infancy and what care do you provide?

A

delayed maturation of the immune system that usually resolves itself by 3-5 years of age. rarely has difficulty with infections (can still produce antibodies of importance), but you still need to treat fevers and the bacterial infections more aggressively.

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12
Q

most common primary immunodeficiency

A

OgA deficient: a great majority are asymptomatic but some cases have increased susceptibility to autoimmunity (celiac disease)

  • normal IgG and IgM but low IgA >4 y/o
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13
Q

Why should you be hesitant on giving IVIG with someone who is IgA deficient?

A

because they may have an anaphylactic reaction

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14
Q

what is selective polysaccharide antibody deficiency

A

difficulty responding to polysaccharide antigens. T cell indepednet response. Other Ags recruit T cells to caoch the B cells (needs a t cell dependent response)

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15
Q

what infection is someone with selectiev antibody deficiency susceptible to? how to treat?

A

streptococcus pneumoniae infections. S. pneumoniae is coated with sugars which should normally generate an antibody response. these patients cannot. there is also no response to the pneumovax vaccine.

  • patients may end up requiring antibody replacement therapy (IVIG)
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16
Q

name encapsulated bacteria

A

Yes, Some Killer Bacteria have nice capsules

yersinia, streptococcus, klebsiella, bacillus, haemophilus, neisseria meningitidis, cryptococcus neoformans

17
Q

ddx?

A

no tonsils = immunocompromised because this is a lymphoid tissue. If all antibodies are undetectable, he probably as agammaglobulinemia

18
Q

outline the hereditery and pathophysiology mechanism of agammaglobulinemia

A

usually X linked.

results in bruton tyrosine kinase resulting in a block in B cell maturation. Agammaglobulinemia results from an absence of mature B cells.

19
Q

this clinical presentation is most likely of:

+ no tonsils

A

agammaglobulinemia. honestly, most immunocompromised illnesses manifest with similar clinical presentation.

No B cells = barely detectably lymphatic tissue.

20
Q

hypo vs agammagloulinemia.

A
21
Q

Dx?

A

CVID: decreased levels of at least 2 Ig isotypes (in this case IgG and IgA), impaired specific antibody productioni (poor vaccine repsonses). diagnosed when all other causes of immune deficiency ruled out

22
Q

clinical presentation of CVID

A
  • often with lymphoproliferation with adenopathy, splenomegaly
  • may hav elymphopenia and decreased T cell function
  • bacterial and ivral infections.
  • most common in white people
23
Q

note;

A
24
Q

acquired humoral immune deficiencies

A
25
Q

investigations for humoral deficiencies

A
  1. number
  2. function
  3. albumin and urine protein to r/o secondary causes
  4. lymphocyte immunophenotyping (measures the number of T,B, NK cells by flow cytometry)
26
Q

methods of testing “do the B cells work”

A

IgGAME

titers to vaccines

27
Q

general management of humoral immunodeficiencies

A
  • IVIG
  • prophylactic antibiotics, and then aggressive antibiotic therapy for infections when present.
  • monitoring for long term complications like chronic lung disease
  • watch for autoimmune complications (CBC, liver enzymes, screening for SLE, thyroid, renal function, glucose)
  • high index of suspicion for malignancy.