Hypersensitivity Flashcards

1
Q

What is hypersensitivity?

A

Inappropriate immune response to otherwise harmless extrinsic antigens

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2
Q

How does autoimmunity differ to hypersensitivity?

A

Autoimmunity is an inappropriate response to other wise tolerated intrinsic antigens
Hypersensitivity has a Type I antibody reaction aswell

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3
Q

End result of inappropriate immune response?

A

Inflammation and destruction of tissue

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4
Q

What mediates type I (immediate) antibody reaction?

A

IgE

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5
Q

How does IgE become sensitised to an allergen?

A

Enzyme able to cleave occludin (forms tight junctions) in susceptible individual enters the mucosa
Taken up by APC, activates Th2 = actives IgE isotype switching, and binds mast cells and causes degranulation

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6
Q

How does IgE cause degranulation of mast cells?

A

Upon repeated infection IgE cross linked = release of pro inflammatory cytokine (histamine, TNF alpha)

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7
Q

Consequences of type I reaction?

A

Hives, asthma, eczema, anaphylaxis

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8
Q

Systemic anaphylaxis

A

Allergens into BS and activate mast cells throughout the body e.g. heart, respiratory tract

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9
Q

Physiological function of IgE

A

Rid body of parasites by physical force

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10
Q

Why are normal effector functions inadequate for most parasites?

A

To big to be phagocytosed etc

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11
Q

What type of T cells cause release of IgE?

A

Th2 (makes B cells switch to IgE)

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12
Q

Other than degranulation and inflammation what is the function of mast cells at mucosal surfaces?

A

Sense PAMPs = activate innate

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13
Q

3 causes of type II reaction in haemolytic anaemia

A

Autoimmunity (anti-erythrocyte autoantibodies)
Allergy to incompatible blood groups
Penicillin allergy

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14
Q

Type III reaction?

Consequence?

A

Immune complex invade tissues and causes inflammation and destruction
Serum sickness in response to drugs e.g. penicillin

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15
Q

How does penicillin cause hypersensitivity?

A

Modifies the protein on erythrocytes so body doesn’t recognise them as self

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16
Q

Name the type I, II, III responses penicillin can cause?

A
I = Anaphylaxis
II = Haemolytic anaemia
III = Serum sickness
17
Q

How is the type IV (delayed) response visible? Cause

A

Localised acute inflammation (blisters) due to increased APC activation so more Th1 is activated relaxing cytokines and recruiting macrophages

18
Q

What antibody mediates this? What T cell?

A

IgG, Th1

19
Q

How can hay fever cause problems in dental practice?

A

Mouth breather = mild gingival hyperplasia

Anti-histamiens, xerostomia

20
Q

What is angioedema?

A

Rapid swelling of dermis and mucosa in response to allergen

21
Q

Why is type I reaction increasing?

A

Hygiene hypothesis (less exposure to potential allergens at young age = can’t build tolerance)