Mechanisms Of Hypersensitivity Type IV - Bowden (Completed) Flashcards
What describes type IV Hypersensitivity? 38
Delayed type hypersensitivity
What are the three types of delayed type hypersensitivities? 39
Contact - skin reaction (eczematous, eczema)
Tuberculin - induced by soluble Abs
Granulomatus (clinically most important)
What are the two stages of delayed type hypersensitivity (type IV)? 40
Sensiztization –> elicitation
What occurs during sensitization of DTH? 40
Ag is taken up by Das and presented via HLA class II
What occurs during elicitation of DTH? 40
Th1 (CD4+) arrives and release pro inflammatory cytokines
Macrophages
Monocytes
inflammatory mediators
What products are released in contact sensitivity (skin rash)? 41
CXCL-8, 9, 11 + TNF-α + IL-1 from keratinocytes
IFNγ from Th1
What is happening during a TB test (PPD)? 42
Induces a delayed type IV hypersensitivity
Used to detect whether preformed T cells have memory and are activated against the injection
What’s happening during a granulomatus reaction? 43
IC pathogens are able to resist killing by macrophages
Instead of enzymes, immune system “walls off” the pathogen to protect the rest of the body
What else is correlated with granulomatus formation? 43
Chronic infections with Th1-like responses
Foreign bodies
What are the type IV Immunopathologies? 44
multiple sclerosis (myelin proteins)
Rheumatoid arthritis
Crohns disease
Viral hepatitis
Contact dermatitis (poison ivy)
Type 1 Diabetes (pancreatic islet Abs)
Chronic infections (Tuberculosis)
Graft rejection
What is Type I, II, III, and IV Hypersensitivities mediated by? 45
Type I - IgE mediated
Type II - IgG mediated (fixed)
Type III - Immune complex Mediated (soluble)
Type IV - Cell-mediated