B Cell Defects (Humoral Immunodeficiencies) Flashcards
the adaptive immune system can be broken down into ___ and ___ processes
humoral and cellular lines.

combined immunodeficiencies are aka
hyper IgM syndromes
3 ways antibodies work
- opsonization to induce death via phagocytosis
- attack by complement
- neutralize microbes (bind receptor on a virus required for cell invasion)
agammaglobulinemia
abnomral B cell maturation resulting in low B cell numbers. no B cells = no antibodies
CVID, selective antibody deficiency or hyper-igM syndromes:
B cells are present, but can’t make antibodies. There is a defect in the ability for B cells to produce antibodies.
Hyper IgM syndromes, CVID has which mechanism of humoral immunodeficiencies?
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.

clinical presentation of someone with humoral immunodeficiency
clinical presentation
- recurrent sinopulmonary infections(sinusitis, otitis media, pneumonia)
- sepsis with diarrhea (giardia, rotavirus), meningoencephalitis
- neutropenia and other autoimmune cytopenias
- malignancy
when does humoral immunodeficiency usually present?
after 6 months ofa ge when maternal Ab titers wane. can present in late childhood or even in adult hood (CVID)
Normal immunoglobulin levels for healthy neonates
low/absent IgM and IgA,
adult level IgG by 3rd trimester.
what is transient hypogammaglobulinemia of infancy and what care do you provide?
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.

most common primary immunodeficiency
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
Why should you be hesitant on giving IVIG with someone who is IgA deficient?
because they may have an anaphylactic reaction
what is selective polysaccharide antibody deficiency
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)
what infection is someone with selectiev antibody deficiency susceptible to? how to treat?
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)
name encapsulated bacteria
Yes, Some Killer Bacteria have nice capsules
yersinia, streptococcus, klebsiella, bacillus, haemophilus, neisseria meningitidis, cryptococcus neoformans
ddx?

no tonsils = immunocompromised because this is a lymphoid tissue. If all antibodies are undetectable, he probably as agammaglobulinemia
outline the hereditery and pathophysiology mechanism of agammaglobulinemia
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.
this clinical presentation is most likely of:
+ no tonsils

agammaglobulinemia. honestly, most immunocompromised illnesses manifest with similar clinical presentation.
No B cells = barely detectably lymphatic tissue.
hypo vs agammagloulinemia.

Dx?

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
clinical presentation of CVID
- often with lymphoproliferation with adenopathy, splenomegaly
- may hav elymphopenia and decreased T cell function
- bacterial and ivral infections.
- most common in white people
note;

acquired humoral immune deficiencies

investigations for humoral deficiencies
- number
- function
- albumin and urine protein to r/o secondary causes
- lymphocyte immunophenotyping (measures the number of T,B, NK cells by flow cytometry)
methods of testing “do the B cells work”
IgGAME
titers to vaccines
general management of humoral immunodeficiencies
- 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.