Immunity and vaccines Flashcards

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1
Q

What are the two types of immunity?

A

Active

Passive

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2
Q

What is active immunity?

A

Immunity when your immune system makes it’s own antibodies after being stimulated by an antigen

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3
Q

What is active natural immunity?

A

When you become immune after catching a disease

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4
Q

What is active artificial immunity?

A

When you become immune after a vaccination containing a harmless dose of the antigen

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5
Q

What is passive immunity?

A

The type of immunity you get from being given antibodies made by a different organism.
Your body doesn’t produce any of it’s own

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6
Q

What is passive natural immunity?

A

When a baby becomes immune due to the antibodies it receives from it’s mother through the placenta and in breastfeeding

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7
Q

What is passive artificial immunity?

A

When you become immune after being injected with antibodies from someone else

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8
Q

What type of protection does active immunity provide and why?

A

Long term

Memory cells are produced

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9
Q

What type of protection does passive immunity provide and why?

A

Short term

Antibodies are broken down

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10
Q

Which type of immunity requires exposure to the antigen?

A

Active immunity

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11
Q

What do vaccines contain?

A

Antigens that cause your body to produce cells against a particular pathogen without the pathogen causing disease

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12
Q

What is herd immunity?

A

When unvaccinated people are protected because the occurrence of the disease is reduced by the number of people who are vaccinated

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13
Q

What type of antigens do vaccines contain?

A

Free or attached to a dead or weakened pathogen

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14
Q

What are disadvantages of taking a vaccine orally?

A

It could be broken down by enzymes in the gut or vaccine molecules might be too big to be absorbed into the blood

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15
Q

Why might booster vaccines be given?

A

To make sure that more memory cells are produced

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16
Q

What are some ethical issues surrounding vaccines?

A

Animal testing
Human testing can be risky
Side effects mean people don’t want to take it
If there was an epidemic, it would be hard to decide who would get the vaccine