Immunodeficiency Flashcards
What are the general principles of an immune response?
- Self-regulation
- Limitation of host damage
- Adaptive responses to changing pathogen
- Multilayer defense
- Multiple mechanisms of pathogen clearance
- Main physiological functions to protect from infection
- Network of pathogen recognition
- Effective inter-cellular communication
What are the functions of lymphocytes?
- B lymph= Potential to secrete antibodies: humoral immunity
- Killer/cytotoxic T= Able to kill: cellular immunity
- Helper T= Secrete growth factors (cytokines) which control immune response: Help B lymph
- Suppressor T= dampen down immune response
How can antibodies bind to antigens to inactivate them?
- Agglutination of microbes
- Neutralisation
- Precipitation of dissolved antigens
- Activation of complement system
How do cytotoxic T cells kill infected cells?
1) Cytotoxic T cells bind to infected cell
2) Perforin makes holes in infected cell’s membrane & enzymes enter promoting apoptosis
3) Infected cell is destroyed
What is immunodeficiency?
Clinical situation where immune system is not effective enough to protect body against infection. Occurring at any age
What are the causes of immunodeficiency?
- Secondary to effects of external factors
- Some primary immunodeficiencies caused by genetic defects in individual components of immune system
What are the causes of secondary/acquired immunodeficiencies
- Stress
- Surgery/burns
- Malnutrition
- Cancer (esp lymphoproliferative disease)
- Immunosuppressive effects of drugs inc cancer therapy
- AIDS
- Irradiation
- Other infections (measles, TB)
What are complications & types of Chronic granulomatous Disease (CGD)?
C=Osteomyelitis, Pneumonia, Swollen lymph nodes
T=Ginigivitis, Non-malignant granulomas, Inflammatory bowel disease
Describe defects in B cells, What do they usually lead to?
- Different degrees of loss of antibody secretion
- Recurrent bacterial infection with pyogenic organisms
- Most very serious
- Usually diagnosed around 1-2years since maternal IgG protects
Name some primary B-cell deficiencies?
- X-linked agammaglobulinaemia
- IgA deficiency
- IgG subclass deficiency
- Transient hypogammaglobulinaemia of infancy
- Autosomal recessive hyper IgM syndrome
- Common variable immunodeficiency
Describe defects in T cells
- More dramatic since B cells also need T cell help
- Symptoms are recurrent infection with opportunistic infections, viruses, bacteria, fungi (candida), protozoa (pneumocystis)
What does a defect in both B & T cells lead to?
Severe combined immunodeficiency syndromes (SCID)
Name some primary T-cell deficiencies
- SCID
- Adenosine deaminase deficiency
- Purine Nucleoside Phosphorylase deficiency
- MHC class II deficiency
- Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome