Vaccination Flashcards

1
Q

What virus causes smallpox and what vaccine is used for it?

A

Variola virus causes smallpox and vaccinia virus can be used in vaccines.

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2
Q

What is subacute sclerosing parencephalitis?

A

A slow viral infection of the central nervous system associated with prior measles infection

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3
Q

What are the principles of vaccination?

A

Pathogens are altered so that they maintain their antigenicity while losing virulence.

Vaccine induces primary antibody and cellular immune response.

Memory cells must be able to proliferate rapidly in secondary immune responses induced in natural infection.

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4
Q

What is the difference between active and passive immunity?

A

Active immunity is produced by person’s own immune system with specificity and memory and can last for decades.

Passive immunity is immunity that is transferred from another person or animal (antibodies only). This kind of protection wanes with time due to antibody half life.

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5
Q

What are the type of vaccines?

A

Live vaccines (vaccinia)

Attenuated live vaccines

Inactivated vaccines (killed)

Component vaccines (toxoids or subunits)

Polysaccharide and polypeptide (cellular fraction) vaccines

Conjugate vaccines

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6
Q

How are attenuated vaccines made?

A

They use pathogens with reduced virulence.

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7
Q

What are the pros and cons of attenuated vaccines?

A

Pros:

Induces strong immune response with strong memory cell formation.

Cons:

Can result in mild infection

In some cases can cause disease. (residual virulence)

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8
Q

How are live attenuated vaccines made?

A

Pathogenic virus is isolated from a patient and grown in human cultured cells.

Cultured virus is used to infect monkey cells.

Virus acquired many mutations allowing it to grow well in monkey cells.

Virus no longer grows well in human cells and can be used as a vaccine.

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9
Q

What vaccines use attenuated viruses?

A

Polio

Measles

Mumps

Rubella

Varicella

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10
Q

What are the pros and cons of using inactivated and component vaccines?

A

Pros:

More safe and are not capable of causing infection.

Can be effective when used with adjuvants.

Cons:

Killed microbes and components don’t provide many antigenic molecules to stimulate immune system.

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11
Q

What are adjuvants?

A

Molecules used to increase effective antigenicity. Activates the innate immune response.

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12
Q

What are toxoid vaccines?

A

Vaccines of non-lethal version of toxins.

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13
Q

What are polysaccharide vaccines?

A

Some bacteria kill without producing toxins. Polysaccharide vaccines use a piece of the bacterial polysaccharide capsule as the trigger of immune response.

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14
Q

Why are polysaccharide vaccines not effective in children <2 years of age? How can this problem be solved?

A

Their T-independent immune systems are not matured but by attaching polysaccharide to a protein it can be converted from a Tindependent to a Tdependent response.

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15
Q

What are conjugate vaccines?

A

Protein and polysaccharide conjugate

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16
Q

What are some new molecular approaches to production of vaccines?

A

Viral or bacterial genes are cloned into genome of another virus and the live virus is used as a vaccine.

17
Q

What kind of vaccine is HPV?

A

noninfectious virus-like particles.

18
Q

What do VLPs do?

A

They induce high titres of virus neutralizing antibodies even in the absence of an adjuvant.

19
Q

How safe are vaccines?

A

Mild toxicity is most common.

Risk of anaphylactic shocks.

Residual virulence from attenuated viruses.

Allegations from antivaxxers caused by wakefield paper

20
Q

What are the 2 forms of polio vaccines?

A

Sabin attenuated vaccine (grows in epithelial cells and does not grow in nerves so doesn’t cause paralysis and this creates gut immunity to polio (IgA)

Salk killed vaccine is a formaldehyde-fixed virus which does not run the risk of reversion does not produce gut immunity, and cannot wipe out the wild-type virus. [this is used when the polio virus has already been wiped out]

21
Q

Why are live viral vaccines used in preference to killed/inactivated viral vaccines?

A

Live viruses create a more complete immune response and trigger a more adequate immune memory.

22
Q

What are the limitations of using passive immunity?

A

Can trigger hypersensitivity reactions

Viral pathogens may contaminate antiserum being delivered.

Antibodies of antisera are degraded quickly

23
Q

What is immunogenicity?

A

Capacity to produce the most immunogenic vaccine.

24
Q

How can immunogenicity be increased?

A

Using larger molecules.

Inducing proteins subcutaneously

Making proteins very different to self proteins

Making adjuvants slow releasing.

25
Q

What are the features of the ideal vaccine?

A

Safe

Protective

Gives sustained protection

Induces neutralizing antibodies

Induces T cell response

Few side effects and reactions.