First Aid Immunology/ Psychiatry Flashcards

1
Q

3 main features of Wiskott-Aldrich Syndrome

A

X-linked recessive

WATER: Wiskott-Aldrich
Thrombocytopenia (20-50k) => easy bruising, petechiae, purpura, epistaxis
Eczema
Recurrent infection

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2
Q

Effect of C1 esterase deficiency

A

Hereditary angioedema b/c allows activation of something that causes huge bradykinin release

-ACEi are contraindicated in these pts

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3
Q

Name two negative acute phase reactants (downregulated by inflammation)

A

Serum proteins whose concentrations decrease in response to inflammation

  • albumin: decrease production to conserve amino acids for the positive reactants (ex: CRP, ferritin, hepcidin, fibrinogen)
  • transferrin: internalized by macrophages to sequester iron intracellularly
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4
Q

Which antibodies are involved in each of the 4 types of hypersensitivity reactions

A

ACID

Type I: Atopy and anaphylaxis (IgE)
Type II: Cytotoxic (IgG and IgM)
Type III: Immune complex (IgG)
Type IV: delayed

Type IV is the only one that doesn’t use antibodies (cell mediated)

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5
Q

Which exposures have preformed antibodies that can be given to unvaccinated patients?

A

“To Be Healed Very Rapidly”

  • tetanus
  • botulinum
  • HBV
  • Varicella
  • Rabies

Given passive immunity

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6
Q

Name two inhibitors/checks on the complement pathway

A
  1. Cd55 = DAF = decay-accelerating factor
  2. C1 esterase inhibitor

Both work to inhibit complement activation to reduce: response to self-cells and spontaneous activation

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7
Q

Give a clinical use of the following recombinant cytokines

(a) IFN-alpha
(b) IFN-beta
(c) IFN-gamma
(d) erythropoietin

A

(a) IFN-alpha used in chronic Hep B/C, Kaposi sarcoma
(b) IFN-beta in multiple sclerosis
(c) IFN-gamma in chronic granulomatous disease
(d) Erythropoietin in anemia (esp in renal failure)

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8
Q

Differentiate what innate and adaptive immunity use for pathogen recognition

A

Innate immunity uses toll-like receptors that recognize patterns associated w/ pathogens

Adaptive immunity use memory cells whereby first exposure produces a stronger and quicker immune response the next time

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9
Q

3 yo w/ recurrent severe ear infxn

  • multiple telangiectasias on face
  • walks w/ difficulty, truncal instability

Dx

A

Dx = ataxia-telangectasia = primary immunodeficiency of both B and T cells 2/2 mutation in ATM gene (DNA repair enzyme)

A’s:

  • Ataxia (2/2 cerebellar atrophy)
  • IgA deficiency => recurrent sinopulmonary infxn
  • Spider Angiomata
  • ATM gene mutation
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10
Q

Chronic granulomatous disease

(a) Pathophysiology
(b) Increased risk of what infections

A

Chronic granulomatous disease

(a) Variety of congenital diseases w/ defective phagocytic NADPH (used to make ROS) => inability to kill certain ingested pathogens
(b) Increased risk of catalase positive species (ex: S. aureus, pseudomonas) and fungi (Aspergillus)

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11
Q

7 yo pt s/p MVA receives blood transfusion to which she develops SOB and oral-facial swelling

  • wheezing on exam and atopic dermatitis
  • Hx: recurrent ear and lung infection

Dx

A

Dx = Selective IgA deficiency

  • anaphylaxis in response to products containing IgA
  • recurrent infection (specifically upper respiratory)
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12
Q

Risk of live attenuated vaccine

A

Reversion to virulent form

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13
Q

What type of hypersensitivity rxn is

(a) Hyperacute transplant rejection
(b) Graft-vs-host disease

A

(a) Hyperacute transplant rejection (within minutes) is a type I hypersensitivity rxn 2/2 preformed antibodies
(b) Graft-vs-host is a delayed cellular response = type IV hypersensitivity

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14
Q

Where do the following mature

(a) T cells
(b) B cells

A

(a) T cells mature in the thymus

(b) B cells mature in the bone marrow

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15
Q

Define acute phase reactant

(a) Induced by what?

(b) Location of production

A

Acute phase reactant is a serum protein whose concentration changes significantly in response to inflammation

(a) Induced by IL-6
(b) All produced by the liver

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16
Q

Which of the following type of hypersensitivity reaction is responsible for the following

(a) Graves disease
(b) Arthus rxn to tetanus vaccine
(c) Pernicious anemia
(d) SLE
(e) Poison ivy
(f) Graft vs. host
(g) Goodpasture syndrome

A

Hypersensitivities

(a) Graves- type II (direct cytotoxic)
(b) Arthus rxn to tetanus vaccine is type III (immune complex mediated)
(c) Pernicious anemia- type II
(d) SLE type III
(e) Poison ivy = contact dermatitis = type IV (cellular, delayed)
- not atopic!! be careful
(f) Graft vs. host- type IV (delayed, cellular)
(g) Goodpastures- cytotoxic type II

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17
Q

Describe how DAF deficiency causes paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria

A

CD55 (DAF = decay-acclerating factor) is a factor that works to inhibit complement activation to self cells, w/ CD55 deficiency you get complement-mediated breakdown of RBCs => paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria

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18
Q

Main fxn of interferon alpha and beta

(a) Secreted by what?

A

Interferon alpha and beta are secreted by virally infected cells to act locally on uninfected cells

Basically work against viral infections
-cause apoptosis locally to disrupt viral amplification

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19
Q

Name the d/o associated w/ the following autoantibodies

(a) Anti-basement membrane
(b) Antiparietal cell
(c) Antimitochondrial
(d) Anti-smooth muscle
(e) Anti-SSA/SSB

A

Autoantibodies

(a) Anti-basement membrane = Goodpastures
(b) Antiparietal = Pernicious anemia
(c) Primary biliary cirrhosis (PBC)
(d) Antimitochondrial = autoimmune hepatitis
(e) Anti-SSA/SSB = Sjogrens

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20
Q

3 mo old referred for recurrent sinopulmonary infection, flow cytometry shows decrease in CD40L

(a) Dx
(b) Antibody profile expected

A

(a) HyperIgM Syndrome
- lack of CD40L causes inability to class switch
- p/w severe pyogenic infections early in life

(b) High IgM w/ very low IgG, IgA, and IgE

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21
Q

What two molecules are the primary opsonins of the complement system

A

Primary opsonins = C3b (binds bacteria directly) and IgG

-work to enhance phagocytosis

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22
Q

Fungal/parasitic infxn seen in dif immunodeficiencies

(a) T cell d/o
(b) B cell d/o
(c) Granulocyte d/o

A

(a) See local candida and PCP w/ reduced T cells
(b) GI giardiasis w/ B cell d/o (ex: recurrent GI infxn in selective IgA deficiency)
(c) Granulocyte d/o => systemic candida, aspergillus

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23
Q

X-linked agammaglobulinemia

a) Differentiate from selective IgA deficiency
(b) Differentiate from common variable immunodeficiency (CVID

A

B cell disorders

(a) X-linked agammaglobulinemia will show reduced serum levels of all Ig classes, while selective IgA deficiency will have low IgA but normal IgE and IgG
(b) X-linked agammaglobulinemia presents earlier (like at 6 mo) while CVID often presents later, CVID has normal number of B cells
- both are defects in B cell maturation

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24
Q

What is anergy?

(a) Importance

A

Anergy = state of inactivity, immune cell cannot be activated by its antigen
-occurs when exposed to antigen w/o co-stimulatory signal

(a) Mechanism of self tolerance

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25
Q

Which type of hypersensitivity is responsible for acute hemolytic transfusion reaction?

A

Type II hypersensitivity (cytotoxic) is responsible for ABO incompatibility
-when antigen exposure causes direct cellular destruction by MAC formation and complement degredation or opsonization

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26
Q

Which classes of antibodies provide immunity to the fetus?

A

IgG crosses the placenta => provides infants w/ passive immunity

IgA is expressed in secretions (saliva, tear,s breast milk) so is responsible for the immunologic benefit of breast feeding

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27
Q

Two structures that drains lymphatics into venous system

A

Right lymphatic duct drains right side of the body above the diaphragm

Then the thoracic duct drains everything else into the junction of the left subclavian and the internal jugular vein

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28
Q

What occurs in the marginal zone of the spleen btwn the red and white pulp?

A

Marginal zone contains APCs that present antigens to lymphocytes

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29
Q

X-linked agammaglobulinemia

(a) What is it?
(b) Clinical manifestation- age and symptoms
(c) Serum findings

A

X-linked agammaglobulinemia

(a) B cell immunodeficiency due to mutation that inhibits B cell mutation
(b) Presents around 6 mo (after passive immunity IgG from mom decreases) w/ recurrent bacterial and enteroviral infections
(c) Absent B cells on peripheral smear, low/no Ig of all classes
- absent/scant lymph nodes

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30
Q

X-linked agammaglobulinemia vs. SCID

A

Both present in early childhood, basically after 6 mo once maternal IgG passive immunity declines

  • X-linked agammaglobulinemia is a B cell d/o => recurrent bacerial and enteroviral infections
  • SCID is both B and T cell d/o (b/c w/o T cells you don’t activate B-cells) => recurrent viral, bacterial, fungal, and protoxoa infections.

B-cell deficiencies => bacterial infections vs. T-cell deficiencies => viral and fungal infections

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31
Q

Live attenuated vaccine vs. inactivated vaccine

(a) Injected material
(b) Response induced
(c) Advantage over the other

A

2 types of vaccines

(a) Live attenuated has lost its pathogenicity but transiently retains capacity to grow in the host, while inactivated is inactivated completely while maintaining epitope on cell surface
(b) Live attenuated induces both cellular and humoral response => strong and often lifelong immunity
(c) Inactivated mainly induces humoral response => weaker response, booster shots often required, but no risk of reverting to virulent form

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32
Q

Cytokine responsible for

(a) Recruiting WBC to site of injury
(b) Vascular leakiness to mediate septic shock
(c) Activate NK cells
(d) Stimulate macrophages
(e) Activate bone marrow stem cell growth and differentiation

A

Important cytokines

(a) TNF-alpha secreted by macrophages recruits WBCs
(b) TNF-alpha secreted by macrophages causes vascular leakiness and mediates septic shock in response to infection
(c) IL-12 from macrophages activate NK cells (feedback response)
(d) Activated NK cells (by IL-12 from macrophages) secrete interferon-gamma to stimulate macrophages to kill phagocytosed pathogens
(e) IL-3 from T cells supports growth and differentiation of bone marrow stem cells

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33
Q

Genetic mechanism of encoding for innate vs. adaptive immunity

A

Innate immunity encoded by germline

Adaptive immunity (T and B cells) produced by variation using VDJ recombination during lymphocyte development

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34
Q

Differentiate opportunistic viral infections seen in T cell vs. B cell deficiencies

A

T-cell deficiency => increased risk of CMV, EBV, JCV, VZV

B-cell deficiency => increased risk of enterovirus (polio, enterovirus, echovirus

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35
Q

Cyclosporine

(a) Mechanism of action
(b) Indication
(c) Toxicity

A

Cyclosporine = immunosuppressant

(a) Calcineurin inhibitor = inhibits transcription of IL-2 => blocks T-cell activation
(b) Organ transplant rejection ppx, psoriasis, RA
(c) Nephrotoxic
- can’t be used in kidney transplant rejection ppx (use sirolimus instead)

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36
Q

Explain why IL-12 receptor deficiency results in a reduced level of serum IFN-gamma

A

IL-12 secreted by macrophages to induce differentiation of T cells to Th1 cells, also activated NK cells

Then in turn Th1 cells (once activated) secrete IFN-gamma to stimulate macrophages => w/o IL-12 and Th1 activation there is reduced IFN-gamma release

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37
Q

Which type of hypersensitivity is

(a) rapid
(b) most delayed
(c) suspected in many autoimmune diseases

A

Hypersensitivity

(a) Type I (anaphylaxis, atopic) is due to IgE preformed antibodies => very rapid response to antigen exposure
(b) Type IV is cell-mediated (no antibodies) so very delayed
(c) Type II and III are suspected in AI d/o (mostly type II except SLE is type III)

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38
Q

Which 2 immunosuppressants are best for kidney transplant rejection ppx

A

The kidney “sir-vives” w/ “Sir”olimus (Rapamycin)
-also use Daclizumab (IL-2R monoclonal antibody)

-can’t use cyclosporine and tacrolimus b/c they’re nephrotoxic

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39
Q

8 yo boy brought in for easy bruising

  • PE; petechiae, purpura, eczematous patches
  • Labs: Plts 30k
  • Hx multiple courses of pneumonia and otitis media

Dx?

A
Dx = Wiskott-Aldrich
"WATER": 
-thrombocytopenia
-eczema 
-recurrent infection

X linked recessive mutation in WAS gene => loss of cellular and humoral response

40
Q

Which antibody class is responsible for

(a) delayed adaptive response
(b) immediate adaptive response
(c) type I hypersensitivity
(d) protecting against gut infections such as Giardia

A

Antibody class

(a) IgG = delayed adaptive immune respones
(b) IgM = immediate response
(c) IgE = binds to basophils and mast cells for type I hypersensitivity
(d) IgA is produced by Peyers patch to protect against gut infection

41
Q

Name some positive acute phase reactants

A

Liver-produced serum proteins whose concentrations significantly rise in response to inflammation as induced by IL-6

  • C-reactive protein
  • ferritin, hepcidin
  • fibrinogen
  • serum amyloid A
42
Q

Which of the following type of hypersensitivty reaction is responsible for the following:

(a) serum sickness
(b) SLE
(c) ABO incompatibility
(d) Tb skin test
(e) Anaphylaxis
(f) Transplant rejection

A

Hypersensitivies

(a) Serum sickness due to immune complex deposition (type III)
(b) SLE due to type III
(c) ABO incompatibility (causing acute hemolytic transfusion rxn) type II
(d) Tb skin test type IV (delayed, cellular not antibody)
(e) Anaphyalxis type I
(f) Transplant rejection (graft vs. host) due to delayed cellular (type IV)

43
Q

Describe the function of the following acute phase reactants

(a) C-reactive protein
(b) ferritin, hepcidin
(c) fibrinogen

A

Acute phase reactants

(a) CRP works as an opsonin- fixed complement and facilitates phagocytosis
(b) Ferritin and hepcidin work to sequester free iron to inhibit microbial iron scavenging
(c) Fibrinogen promotes endothelial repair

44
Q

Differentiate the functions of IgG and IgM

A

IgG responsible for the delayed adaptive while IgM is responsible for the immediate response

Both activate complement by the classical pathway

45
Q

In a child w/ recurrent severe sinus and respiratory tract infections, what complement deficiency do you have a high suspicion for?

A

C3 deficiency- C3 is where all 3 pathways (classic, alternative, lectin) converge, so deficiency results in increase risk of infection

46
Q

Which cells contain the following surface proteins

(a) CD28
(b) CD19
(c) CD56
(d) CD34
(e) CD21

A

Cell surface proteins

(a) CD28 on T cells for costimulatory signal
(b) CD19 on B cells
(c) CD56 specific marker for NK cells
(d) CD34 on hematopoetic stem cells
- so significant when looking for malignancies

47
Q

Live attenuated vaccine vs. inactivated vaccine

(a) Injected material
(b) Response induced
(c) Advantage over the other

A

2 types of vaccines

(a) Live attenuated has lost its pathogenicity but transiently retains capacity to grow in the host, while inactivated is inactivated completely while maintaining epitope on cell surface
(b) Live attenuated induces both cellular and humoral response => strong and often lifelong immunity
(c) Inactivated mainly induces humoral response => weaker response, booster shots often required, but no risk of reverting to virulent form

48
Q

Which live attenuated vaccines can be given to an HIV+ pt

A

Only live attenuated vaccine you can give to an HIV+ pt is the MMR

Contraindicated: intranasal influenza, varicella, polio, yellow fever

49
Q

What determines whether or not a vaccine will require a booster?

A

Certain antigens don’t contain a peptide component (ex: LPS from G- bacteria) => can’t be presented to MHC by T cells => weakly or non-immunogenic (don’t elicit huge immune response)

While antigens that contain a protein component will activate class switching and immunologic memory 
-producing one time long time vaccines
50
Q

Name 7 encapsulated bacteria that ppl w/ splenic dysfunction are at an increased risk of getting infected with

A

Encapsulated bacteria

  • Haemophillus influenza B
  • streptococcus pneumonia
  • neisseria meningitis
  • Group B streptococcus
  • Klebsiella
  • E coli
  • salmonella
51
Q

Name two histologic findings in pts post-splenectomy

A
  1. Howel-Jolly bodies = nuclear remnants in RBC

2. Target cells b/c spleen is supposed to remove misshaped RBCs but not around to

52
Q

Where do B cells undergo isotype switching

A

In the germinal centers of lymph nodes B cells undergo isotype switching (2/2 signal from T cells) that mature them into plasma cells

53
Q

Using one word describe/differentiate the 4 types of hypersensitivity reactions

A

ACID

Type I: Atopy and anaphylaxis (IgE)
Type II: Cytotoxic (IgG and IgM)
Type III: Immune complex (IgG)
Type IV: delayed

Type IV is the only one that doesn’t use antibodies (cell mediated)

54
Q

What part of the lymph node enlarges when body is responding to a viral infection

A

Paracortex enlarges- part containing T cells

55
Q

Give an example of each of the 4 types of hypersensitivity reactions

A

ACID

Type I: anaphylaxis (bee sting), atopy

Type II: cytotoxic

  • ABO incompatibility (acute hemolytic transfusion rxn)
  • Goodpastures disease
  • Graves, Guillain-Barre, Myasthenia gravis, pernicious anemia

Type III: immune complex deposition

  • SLE
  • Arhrus = swelling and inflammation following tetanus vaccine
  • Serum sickness

Type IV: delayed cellular response

  • transplant rejection
  • contact dermatitis (poison ivy)
56
Q

Relate the mechanism of action of immunosuppressant Daclizumab to SCID

A

Daclizumab = immunosuppressant, monoclonal antibody against IL-2R

SCID = congenital defect in IL-2R

57
Q

Which 2 immunosuppressants are MC used for autoimmune conditions

A

Azathioprine (antimetabolite that inhibits lymphocyte proliferation) and glucocorticoids (inhibits cytokine produciton)

58
Q

Selective IgA deficiency

(a) Caution during transfusion
(b) Clinical manifestation
(c) Serum findings

A

Selective IgA deficiency = most common primary immunodeficiency

(b) Can have anaphylaxis (type I hypersensitivity) in response to blood products w/ IgA

59
Q

Differentiate

(a) Autograft
(b) Allograft
(c) Xenograft

A

(a) Self graft
(b) Allograft = graft from same species
(c) Xenograft = graft from dif species

60
Q

4 yo boy w/ fever, rigors, and dyspnea following BCG vaccine administration

  • CXR w/ pneumonitis
  • Blood specimen w/ acid-fast bacili

Dx? (hint: T-cell immunodeficiency)

A

IL-12 receptor deficiency

  • can present after BCG vaccine
  • IL-12 activated Th1 cells => reduced cytotoxic T cell activity
  • associated w/ disseminated mycobacterial and fungal infections
61
Q

Name 2 calcineurin inhibitors

A

Calcineurin inhibitors inhibit IL-2 transcription => blocks T-cell activation

  1. cyclosporine
  2. tacrolimus
62
Q

Distinguish the components of innate vs. adaptive immunity

A

Innate immunity- neutrophils, macrophages, NK cells, complement

Adaptive immunity- T cells, B cells, antibodies

63
Q

6 yo p/w recurrent infections, treated w/ gene therapy for deficiency in adenosine deaminase (ADA)

Dx?

A

ADA deficiency = 2nd MC cause of SCID

MC defect = defective IL-2R gamma chain

64
Q

DiGeorge Syndrome

(a) Genetics
(b) Immunology presentation
(c) Other clinical features

A

DiGeorge = (a) microdeletion of 22q11

(c) ‘CATCH-22”
- cardiac abnormalities: ToF, truncus arteriosus, interrupted aortic arch
- abnormal facies
(b) -thymic aplasia => reduced T-cells- recurrent viral/fungal infxns
- cleft palate
- hypocalcemia 2/2 parathyroid agenesis (failure to develop 3rd and 4th pharyngeal pouches)

65
Q

Common variable immunodeficiency

(a) What is it?
(b) Age of onset
(c) Serum findings
(d) Clinical findings

A

CVID

(a) Mulitple etiologies for B cell maturation defect
(b) Can be acquired in early adulthood (like 20/30s)
(c) Normal number of B cells but reduced plasma cells and Ig

66
Q

Which cells contain the following surface proteins

(a) MHC I
(b) MHC II
(c) CD4
(d) CD8

A

Cell surface proteins

(a) MHC I on all nucleated cell surfaces (so all except RBCs)
(b) MHC II are on APCs- B cells and macrophages
(c) CD4 on Th2 cells (helper T cells and regulatory T cells)
(d) CD8 on Th1 cytotoxic killer T cells

67
Q

Cytokine key for

(a) Causing fever
(b) Stimulating acute-phase protein production
(c) Recruiting neutrophils
(d) Differentiating T cells into Th1 cells
(e) Differentiating T cells into Th2 cells
(f) Promoting B cell differentiation and class switching
(g) Calming down the inflammatory response

A

Important cytokines

(a) IL-1 from macrophages is the main one that causes fever
(b) IL-6 from macrophages stimulates production of acute-phase proteins (CRP, ferritin)
(c) IL-8 recruits neutrophils
(d) IL-12 from macrophages induces differentiation of T cells into Th1 cells
(e) IL-4 from Th2 cells induces differentiation of T cells into more Th2 cells
(f) IL-4 from Th2 cells promotes B cell growth and class switching to IgE and IgG
(g) IL-10 is secreted from Th2 cells (and regulatory T cells) to modulate/attenuate the inflammatory response

68
Q

Which type of transplant rejection is prevented/reversed w/ immunosuppression?

A

Immunosuppression (cyclosporine, tacrolimus, sirolimus) given to prevent acute (week to months) rejection

  • Prevent hyperacute (w/in minutes) rejection by carefully choosing donor
  • Can’t prevent chronic (mo to year) rejection
69
Q

MC primary immunodeficiency

A

Selective IgA deficiency

  • mechanism unknown, but low IgA w/ normal IgG and IgM
  • can be asymptomatic or present w/ current airway and GI infections
70
Q

Differentiate classical and operant conditioning

A

Classical conditioning (Pavlov’s dog) = involuntary response to signal

Operant conditioning = voluntary response, due to reinforcement and punishments

71
Q

Differentiate these two ego defenses: displacement vs. projection

A

Both are immature ego defenses

  • displacement = transfer unwanted feelings onto a neutral person (mad at teacher so mad at mom)
  • projection = attribute unacceptable internal impulse to an external source (want to sleep w/ someone so you accuse your significant other of cheating)
72
Q

Differentiate these two defenses: reaction formation vs. sublimation

A

Reaction formation is an immature defense when you ward off an idea by doing the opposite (want to sleep w/ boys so become a priest)

While sublimation is a mature defense where you replace an unacceptable wish w/ a similar one that doesn’t conflict w/ your values (angry at father so want to be aggressive, channel that into sports)

73
Q

Age of onset

(a) ADHD
(b) Separation anxiety d/o
(c) Tourettes

A

Age of onset

(a) ADHD must present before age 12 for dx
(b) Separation anxiety d/o MC btwn 7-9 yoa
(c) Tourettes: motor and vocal tics both must be present and must start before age 18 for dx

74
Q

Which type of amnesia is more prominent in Korsakoff syndrome

A

Korsakoff syndrome (B1 deficiency in alcoholics) see more anterograde than retrograde amnesia

-more inability to form new memories

75
Q

Differentiate delirium from dementia

A

Delirium- level of consciousness wax and wanes, change in sensorium is reversible

Dementia- memory loss, w/o affecting level of consciouness, often (but not always: hypothyroidism, B12 levels, NPH) irreversible

76
Q

Differentiate hallucinations from delusions

A

Hallucinations are perceptions in the absence of actual external stimuli

While delusions are false believes that persist despite facts proving contrary

77
Q

Differentiate hallucinations from delusions

A

Hallucinations are perceptions in the absence of actual external stimuli

While delusions are false believes that persist despite facts proving contrary

78
Q

Differentiate diagnosis requirements of

(a) Schizophrenia
(b) Schizoaffective d/o
(c) Schizophreniform
(d) Brief psychotic d/o

A

Dx requirements

(a) Schizophrenia = at least 2 positive symptoms for at least 6 months
(b) Schizoaffective d/o = schizophrenia w/ mood d/o, mood d/o only present w/ psychosis, but psychosis can be present w/o mood disruption
(c) Schizophreniform d/o = schizophrenia that lasts btwn 1-6 mo
(d) Brief psychotic episode = schizophrenia features for under 1 mo, usually 2/2 stress

79
Q

Differentiate diagnosis requirements of mania vs. hypomania

A

Mania- at least 3 DIG FAST characteristics, lasts for at least 7 days

Hypomania- 4 or more days, features not severe enough to significantly impair functioning, no psychotic features

80
Q

Diagnosis requirements of bipolar I vs. II

(a) Cyclothymic d/o

A

BP I = at least one manic episode, doesn’t necessarily have depressive episode
-basically any full manic episode buys you a dx of bipolar I

BP II = hypomanic and depressive episode
-no episode of full mania

(a) Cyclothymic d/o = hypomania and dysthymia for at least 2 yrs

81
Q

Describe the concept of atypical depression

A

Not atypical as in less common, it’s actually the most common subtype, but atypical as in not having the features of the classically describe depression

Hyperphagia, hypersomnia, mood reactivity (can transiently be happy to positive events), hypersensitivity to rejection

82
Q

First line tx for atypical depression

A

1st line for all depression: CBT and SSRI

MAOIs are specifically very effective vs. atypical depression, but still not first line b/c of their risk profle

83
Q

Definition of postpartum mood disturbances

A

Has to have onset w/in 4 weeks of delivery (so 4 mo after delivery doesn’t count snitches)

84
Q

Features that make grief pathologic

A
  • Lasting more than 6 mo
  • meets major depressive criteria (wt loss, suicidality)
  • if includes psychotic symptoms like delusions
85
Q

Features that make grief pathologic

A
  • Lasting more than 6 mo
  • meets major depressive criteria (wt loss, suicidality)
  • if includes psychotic symptoms like delusions
86
Q

What makes a panic d/o out of a panic attack?

A

Just one panic attack (peaking in 10 mins) doesn’t make a d/o, need to also have the attack followed by a resultant change in behavior due to

  • worrying about the consequences of the attack
  • worrying about having another

So basically person has to be bothered by the attack significantly for over a month, not just have a panic attack

87
Q

Differentiate GAD and adjustment d/o

A

Generalized anxiety d/o is w/ no single trigger and lasts over 6 mo

Adjustment d/o lasts under 6 months and is following an identifiable psychosocial stressor

88
Q

Distinguish PTSD from acute stress d/o

A

PTSD when symptoms last over a month

Acute stress d/o: 3 days to 1 mo

89
Q

Differentiate somatic symptom from factitious disorders

A

In somatic symptom (conversion, hypochondriac) d/o the deception is unconscious, while factitious d/o the pt is conscious they are being deceptive, but they are doing it for primary (internal) gain

Somatic symptom d/o- pt unaware they’re faking symptoms

Factitious d/o (Munchausen)- pt is aware they’re faking symptoms, but aren’t sure why they’re doing it (doing it for internal gain (sick role) not external like malingering)

90
Q

Differentiate somatic symptom from factitious disorders

A

In somatic symptom (conversion, hypochondriac) d/o the deception is unconscious, while factitious d/o the pt is conscious they are being deceptive, but they are doing it for primary (internal) gain

Somatic symptom d/o- pt unaware they’re faking symptoms

Factitious d/o (Munchausen)- pt is aware they’re faking symptoms, but aren’t sure why they’re doing it (doing it for internal gain (sick role) not external like malingering)

91
Q

Briefly differentiate the three cluster of personality d/o and what they have a genetic association with

A

“Weird, Wild, Worried”

Cluster A: ‘accusatory, aloof, awkward’ odd/eccentric, genetic association w/ schizophrenia
-paranoid, schizoid, schizotypal

Cluster B: ‘bad to the bone’, genetic association w/ mood and substance d/o
-antisocial, borderline, histrionic, narcissistic

Cluster C: ‘cowardly, compulsive, clingy’, genetic association w/ anxiety d/o
-avoidant, obsessive compulsive, dependent

92
Q

Differentiate schizoid and schizotypal personality d/o

A

Both cluster A (weird) personality d/o

Schizoid = distant, content w/ social isolation, voluntary social withdrawal

Schizoid plus odd magical thinking = schizotypal, odd beliefs, eccentric appearance

93
Q

Differentiate OCD from obsessive compulsive personality d/o

A

OCD- pt is bothered by their obsessions/compulsions

OC personality d/o when the behavior is consistent w/ the pts beliefs and attitudes

94
Q

Differentiate borderline and histrionic personality d/o

A

Both bordering and histrionic are cluster B (wild) personality d/o

Borderline = impulsive, self-mutilation, unstable mood and interpersonal relationships

Histrionic = attention seeking, sexually provocative

95
Q

Differentiate schizoid and avoidant personality d/o

A

Schizoid (cluster A- weird) is when pt prefers social isolation, voluntary social withdrawal

Avoidant (cluster C- worried) is when the pt is super shy and hypersensitive to rejection so they’re distant, but they desire relationships

96
Q

Distinguish the 4 ‘schizoids’ on a spectrum

A

Schizoid, then add odd thinking and get schizotypal, then add even more odd thinking and get schizophrenia, then add mood d/o and get schizoaffective

97
Q

What is orexin?

(a) Associated d/o

A

Orexin = neuropeptide that regulates arousal/wakefulness

(a) Destruction of neurons that produce orexin in the lateral hypothalamus = narcolepsy- get cataplexy (sudden loss of muscle tone)