Chapter 1 Flashcards
Examples of pathogens that cause human disease include:
- Bacteria
- Viruses
- Fungi
- Parasites (protozoans and worms)
- All of the above are examples pathogens that cause human disease
All of the above are examples pathogens that cause human disease
A term generally used to describe all white blood cells is__.
- Hematopoietic cells
- Myeloid progenitor
- Dendritic cells
- Monocytes
- Leukocytes
Leukocytes
All of the following are examples of chemical barriers of innate immunity except __.
- Lactic acid
- Normal microbiota
- Lysozyme
- Fatty acids
- proteases
Normal microbiota
During an infection, __ are mobilized in large numbers from the bone marrow.
- Dendritic cell
- Memory cells
- Macrophages
- Neutrophils
- B cells
Neutrophils
Spherical regions in lymph nodes containing areas that are packed densely with proliferating B cells are called__.
- Efferent vessels
- Germinal centers
- Red pulp zones
- Periarterial lymphoid sheaths
- Medullary sinuses
Germinal centers
Immune cells within the lymphatic circulation are directly deposited into which of the following anatomical sites so that the cells may reenter the bloodstream?
- Right aorta
- Left subclavian vein
- Left carotid artery
- High endothelial venule (HEV)
- Hepatic vein
Left subclavian vein
__ act as cellular messengers by delivering degraded pathogens to lymphoid organs.
- Plasma cells
- Dendritic cells
- Large granular lymphocytes
- Mast cells
- Basophils
Dendritic cells
In most cases, adaptive immune responses rely on the initial activation of __ in secondary lymphoid tissue.
- Macrophages
- T cells
- B cells
- Dendritic cells
- Epithelium
T cells
All of the following statements are characteristic of secondary immune responses except __.
- Secondary immune responses are activated when primary immune responses fail to completely eradicate an infection.
- Secondary immune responses are restricted to adaptive immune responses
- Memory cells are activated rapidly during secondary immune responses.
- Secondary immune responses are orders of magnitude greater than primary immune responses.
- During a secondary immune response to a booster vaccine it is possible to experience a primary immune response to an unrelated vaccine component encountered for the first time.
Secondary immune responses are activated when primary immune responses fail to completely eradicate an infection
Another name for a large granular lymphocyte is a__.
- Plasma cell
- Helper T cell
- Monocyte
- Natural killer (NK) cell
- Eosinophil
Natural killer (NK) cell
Effector cells that secrete antibodies are known as__.
- Natural killer cells
- Cytotoxic T cells
- Helper T cells
- M cells
- Plasma cells
Plasma cells
The __is (are) the lymphoid organ(s) that filter(s) the blood.
- Spleen
- Tonsils
- Peyer’s patches
- Appendix
- Adenoids
Spleen
The thin layer of cells that makes up the interior lining of the blood vessels is called the__.
- Mucosa
- Epithelium
- Endothelium
- Connective tissue
- Lymphoid tissue
Endothelium
Vaccination is best described as prevention of severe disease by__.
- The deliberate introduction of a virulent strain of an infectious agent
- Prior exposure to an infectious agent in an attenuated or weakened form
- Prophylactic treatment with antibiotics
- Stimulating effective innate immune responses
- Using effective public-health isolation regimens such as quarantine
Prior exposure to an infectious agent in an attenuated or weakened form
The first line of defense against microorganisms that infect the body is referred to as \_\_. -Opportunistic immunity -Innate immunity -Adaptive immunity Primary immunity -Central immunity
Innate immunity
Examples of granulocytes include all of the following except:
a. neutrophil
b. monocyte
c. basophil
d. eosinophil
monocyte
Which of the following statements regarding neutrophils is false?
a. Neutrophils are mobilized from the bone marrow to sites of infection when needed.
b. Neutrophils are active only in aerobic conditions.
c. Neutrophils are phagocytic.
d. Neutrophils form pus, which comprises dead neutrophils.
e. Dead neutrophils are cleared from sites of infection by macrophages.
Neutrophils are active only in aerobic conditions.
Which of the following is not characteristics of innate immunity?
a. inflammation
b. improvement in recognition of the pathogen during the response
c. fast response
d. no immunological memory required
e. cytokine production
improvement in recognition of the pathogen during the response
When effector lymphocytes secrete _____, an inflammatory response ensues.
a. lysozyme
b. defensins
c. lymph
d. sebum
e. cytokines
cytokines
_____ cells persist long after an individual has been vaccinated.
a. Neutrophil
b. Plasma
c. Memory
d. M
e. Mast
Memory
The most abundant type of leukocyte in human peripheral blood is the _____.
a. eosinophil
b. basophil
c. neutrophil
d. monocyte
e. lymphocyte
neutrophil
The last cases of smallpox were reported in the _____.
a. 1950s
b. 1960s
c. 1970s
d. 1980s
e. 1990s.
1970s