Immune Therapies Flashcards

1
Q

what is the most effective strategy to prevent infectious disease?

A

vaccination

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2
Q

how do vaccines work?

A

replicate immunity from natural infection without illness

- primary aim is to stimulate adaptive immunity and generate long-term immunological memory

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3
Q

what immune response occurs 0-12 hours after infection?

A

innate immunity

- inflammatory response

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4
Q

what occurs 1-7 days after infection?

A

adaptive immune response

  • dendritic antigen presenting cells stimulate T cells
  • effector T cell (clones) activate B cells
  • B cells become plasma cells which produce highly specific antibodies
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5
Q

explain the induction of highly specific antibodies (to natural infection) via the primary response:

A
  • low specificity IgM produced first

- high specificity IgG takes longer (requires T cell help causing lag)

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6
Q

explain the induction of highly specific antibodies (to natural infection) via the secondary response:

A
  • high specificity IgG produced by long-lived plasma cells
  • more rapid
  • more effective
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7
Q

how do vaccines initiate the immune response?

A

by exposing our immune system to disease-causes microbial antigens (but without disease!)
- pathogen is modified making it unable to cause disease

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8
Q

what are the different types of vaccines?

A
  • live attenuated
  • inactivated
  • subunit
  • viral vector
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9
Q

what is a live attenuated vaccine? an example of this?

A
  • live pathogen but weakened via genetic manipulations

- MMR, BCG

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10
Q

are live attenuated vaccines successful? when may they not be suitable?

A
  • excellent life long immunity

- potentially pathogenic in immunocomprimised

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11
Q

what is an inactivated vaccine? an example of this?

A
  • pathogen is killed through chemical or physical processes
  • cannot replicate or cause disease
  • Polio
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12
Q

are inactivated vaccines effective?

A
  • safer than live vaccines but less effective
  • weak immunity
  • therefor several doses required
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13
Q

what are the different kinds of subunit vaccines?

A
  • recombinant
  • toxoid
  • polysaccharide
  • conjugate
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14
Q

what are subunit vaccines?

A

purified antigens (no live components or whole organism)

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15
Q

what are recombinant subunit vaccines? an example of this?

A
  • contains the protein receptor that the virus uses to attach to our cells (to stimulate immunity)
  • Hep B, HPV
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16
Q

what are toxoid subunit vaccines? an example of this?

A
  • inactivated bacterial toxins

- Diphtheria and Tetanus

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17
Q

what are polysaccharide vaccines?

A
  • contain subunit found on outside of encapsulated bacteria that helps it hide from our immune response
  • T cell independent response
18
Q

what are conjugate vaccines? an example of these?

A
  • contains polysaccharide antigens linked to proteins (T cells & B cells involved)
  • PCV/Men-C
19
Q

alongside the pathogen source, what else is also found within vaccines?

A

Adjuvants

20
Q

what is the function of Adjuvants?

A

specific molecules that enhance the immune response to vaccine antigens

21
Q

in what type of vaccines are adjuvants most important?

A
  • inactivated vaccines

- subunit vaccines

22
Q

what are adjuvants composed of? how do these enhance immune response?

A

Aluminium/calcium salts

  • maintain and prolong antigen stability
  • enhance and prolong antigen presentation
  • granuloma formation**
23
Q

what are different routes of administrations for vaccines?

A
  • intramuscular
  • subcutaneous
  • intradermal
  • intranasal
24
Q

what is the most common route of administration for vaccines?

A

intramuscular

25
Q

by what rout of administration is the BCG vaccine given?

A

intradermal

26
Q

what are corticosteroids? an example?

A

synthetic version of cortisol (stress hormone)

- prednisolone

27
Q

what effect does cortisol have on the immune response?

A

dampens immune response

28
Q

what is the function of corticosteroids?

A

non-specific anti-inflammatory function

- used to treat a wide range of inflammatory/allergic conditions

29
Q

how are corticosteroids applied?

A

systemic or topical application

30
Q

what are some of the side effects of corticosteroids?

A
  • weight gain
  • risk of infection
  • risk of diabetes
  • risk of hypertension
31
Q

what type of drugs are NSAIDs?

A

COX-2 inhibitors

32
Q

what is the function of NSAIDs? examples of these?

A
  • reduce pain, inflammation and fever

- ibuprofen and aspirin

33
Q

what are some limitations of NSAIDs?

A
  • overuse can lead to gastro-intestinal bleeding, liver and kidney problems
  • interactions with other medications (warfarin, methotrexate, diuretics)
34
Q

what is an example of a DMARD? (disease-modifying anti-rheumatic drug)

A

Methotrexate

35
Q

what are some uses of methotrexate?

A
  • used at high doses as a chemotherapy agent

- used at low doses to treat inflammatory arthritis

36
Q

what are biological therapies?

A

genetically engineered antibodies made from human genes (monoclonal antibodies)

37
Q

how do biological therapies work?

A

directly target specific components of the immune system to inhibit activity

  • B cell inhibitor
  • Cytokine blockers
38
Q

what are examples of anti-TNF drugs?

A
  • infliximab

- etanercept

39
Q

how does Infliximab work?

A

by binding soluble TNFa and prevents it from interacting with receptor

40
Q

how does Etanercept work?

A

binds and blocks TNF receptor (prevents cytokine binding)