Immunology Lectures Flashcards

1
Q

What are the main factors in pathogenesis of periodontitis?

A
  1. Make up of bacterial biofilm plaque and products of the bacteria
  2. Activity of immune system cells
  3. Host tissue cells
  4. Angiogenesis process during inflammation (formation of new small blood vessels)
  5. Adhesion of molecules & ligands - involved with migration of blood cells - chemotaxis
  6. Innate defence - activity of cells and proteins
  7. Acquired defence - congenital deficiency like PMN reduction
  8. Environmental factors
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2
Q

What actually cause damage in periodontitis?

A

It is the excessive host immune response that causes damage to the tissue of the host during periodontal disease - it is an inflammatory disease after all

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3
Q

What are the cells that are involved in the periodontium immune response?

A
  1. Gingival epithelial cells
  2. Fibroblasts
  3. Monocytes
  4. Monocytes
  5. Tissue macrophages & dendritic cells
  6. Neutrophils
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4
Q

What are the 4 properties that smoking particles have?

A
  1. Cytotoxic properties
  2. Mutagenic properties
  3. Carcinogenic properties
  4. Antigenic properties
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5
Q

What effects the persons exposure to smoke chemicals?

A
  1. Dose
  2. Tobacco type
  3. Route of injestion
  4. Chronicity of exposure
  5. Presence of other factors at the time like concentration of inflammatory mediators of immune cell stimulation
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6
Q

What is important to understand about the harm of tobacco?

A

The reactive oxidative substance that cause the most damage to the body acctually originate from the combustion of the tobacco leaf.

Thus the gas - if the most toxic - also improves the penetration into epithelial lining

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7
Q

What is the danger of the tobacco smoke to the immune system?

A

The smoke can have a profound immunomodulatory effect on the innate and aquired immunity.

Essentially the smoke promotes immune dysfunction.

Exmaoke - due to changes to the immune response in the oral cavity - LPS from microbial cell components is found to be in higher proportion in smokers

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8
Q

What effect does smoke have on the immune function?

A

It has an affect by both suppressing and stimulating immune system

Decrease immunity in infection and natrual killer cell activity.

Increase inflammation, accumulation of cellular debris and more

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9
Q

How does tobacco smoke affect the cell signalling pathways?

A

Tobacco smoke alters the cell signalling pathway in order to increase the inflammatory stimuli and decrease the bodies ability to appropriately (key word APROPRIATLEY) react to it.

The result : the state of chronic injury and inflammation

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10
Q

Why are smoker at more risk of periodontitis?

A

Persistent mucosal epithelial activation by the microbes in a dimished immune system thta is unable to perfomr appropriate anti-microbial functions due to deregulation caused by cigarette smoke, increases the likelihood of smokers developing periodontitis.

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11
Q

What is one of the most effective public health intervention ever developed?

A

Vaccinations

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12
Q

What are the requirments for successful eradication of a virus?

A
  1. Vailability of an effective, attenuated vaccne
  2. Antigen stable virus
  3. Absence of asymptomatic cases or persistent carriers
  4. Absence of an animal reservoir
  5. Public cooperation
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13
Q

What is required for herd immunity?

A

Critical percentage of immune individuals needs to be reached

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14
Q

What are some implication that may arise from vaccine refusal?

A
  1. Increased infections
  2. Increased hospitalisations
  3. Increased deaths
  4. Increased injury caused by infection
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