Theme 3 Lecture 22: Immunisation Flashcards
What are the two most effective medical interventions ever?
- access to clean water
2. vaccination
Which infectious disease is responsible for the largest number of child deaths by infection?
pneumococcal infection
What are the aims of vaccination?
- selective protection of the vulnerabke
- elimination - herd immunity (to create the level of immunity to be high enough so propagation will not occur)
- eradication
- prevent deaths, infection, transmission
- to reduce mortality and morbidity from vaccine preventable infections
What are our non-specific immune defences?
- unbroken skin
- mucous membrane of gut, lung
- acid and enzymes of gut
- non-specific metabolism/inactivation
What is passive immunity?
vertical transmission of auto-antibodies from mother to foetus and breastfeeding
- maternal antibodies can protect the baby for up to a year against illness to which the mother is immune
- Ig can be given to a person who needs antibodies
- usually lasts weeks/months
What is active immunity?
- long-lasting immunity produced by the immune system in response to antigens
- from natural infection or vaccination
What is immunologic memory?
the persistence of protection for many years after natural infection or vaccination
Primary immune response develops in the weeks following first exposure to an antigen. Which antibody is mainly responsible for this?
IgM
Which antibody is mainly responsible for the faster, more powerful secondary immune response?
IgG
How do antibodies produce immunity?
- Antibodies produced from B lymphocytes
- Antibody binds non-specifically to variable region of antibody (Ig) molecule. This triggers clonal expansion
- 1st wave of IgM production, followed by IgG production
- IgG binds tightly to antigen and through simultaneous complement binding facilitates the destruction of the antigen-bearing micro-organism
- When infection resolved levels of IgG decline
- However one set of the IgG producing B lymphocytes persist with the ability to recognise that specific antigen = immunological memory
Which main vaccines are live and act like the natural infection?
MMR
BCG (Tb vaccine)
Yellow fever
Varicella
Which main vaccines are inactivated?
pertussis, typhoid, IPV
What does the IPV vaccine protect against?
diphtheria, tetanus, pertussis (whooping cough) and polio
Which vaccines use components of the antimicrobial organisms?
influenza, pneumococcal
Which vaccines use the inactivated toxins?
diptheria, tetanus