Primary Immunodeficiency (PID) Flashcards
What happens in normal infections?
1) Infectious agent triggers innate immune response
2) Antigens recognised as non-self and dangerous induce adaptive immune response
3) Ultimately clear infection and establishes state of protective immunity
What is PID?
Genetic immune deficiencys which cause part of the immune system to be eliminated or function abnormally
Why would you suspect someone has PID?
They get more infections particularly pathogens
What is secondary immunodeficiency?
Also known as acquired immunodeficiency (AIDS) which is caused by external sources
Are PIDs normally inherited?
Yes
What are the different ways PID can affect the body?
Lack of immune response
Inefficient immune response
Dysfunctional immune response
When is PID severe?
Is diagnosed in children rather than adult diagnosis as this would be mild.
Can PID be caused by a trigger?
Yes
Is there lots of different PIDs?
Yes over 350
What is the inheritance of PID?
Most single gene causes of PID is recessive (COMMON IF PARENTS ARE RELATED).
Majority are X-linked recessive and so generally only males show it e.g. IPEX, X-linked SCID
Often complete loss is not compatable with life.
What do CD4+ enhance?
The innate immune attack
What are the types of CD4+ cells and what do they trigger and fight?
Th1 = Macrophages = Extracellular bacteria, listeria, leishmania, pneumocystis, mycobacteria.
Th2 = Mast cells, eosinophils, basophils = helminth parasites
Th17 = Neutrophils = extracellular bacteria and fungi
Tfh = B cells - all microbes
Treg = T cells = self and microbiome derived
Can knowing type of oppertunistic infections give clue to type of PID?
Yes e.g. if they are getting lots of helminth parasite infections you would think they had an issue with their Th2 cells and no eosinophils, basophils would be produced
What type of PID would you think if someone had lots of intracellular bug infections e.g. mycobacterial TB?
Defect in macrophages or T cell immunity
What type of PID would you think someone would have is they had lots of extracellular encapsulated bacteria?
Defect in antibodies, complement or phagocytes
What type of PID dysfunction would you think someone would have is they had lots of fungal infections e.g. candida?
T cell dysfunction
What type of PID deficiency would you think someone would have is they had lots of herpes virus recurrance?
NK and CTL deficiency
What might viral susceptibility lead to?
Cancer
When would you think of PID as a diagnosis?
When someone is getting opportunistic pathogen infections that is usually mild bit life threatening in these cases. And either a high WBC count or low WBC cound
What infections in children is a concern for PID?
Continous, recurrent upper respiratory tract infections or pneumonia