Solid Organ Transplant Rejection Flashcards

1
Q

Patients with transplants

A

-need to take medications to suppress natural immune system response —> prevent rejection

-take medications to prevent infection

Often have some degree of rejection and OI

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2
Q

Transplant organs

A

Heart, lungs, small intestine, pancreas, liver, kidneys, cornea, cartilage and bone marrow (no considered a solid organ)

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3
Q

Bone marrow transplant rejection

A

Graft vs host disease
Target of rejection is recipient’s own cells
Any HLA cell is a target

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4
Q

Solid organ transplantation

A

Target of rejection is only the transplanted organ cells
Rejection is a T-cell mediated immune response

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5
Q

Human leukocyte antigen HLA

A

HLA systems are made up of HLA antigens the histocompatibility genes aka (MHC) are responsible for coding these proteins located on chromosome 6

Major Histocompatibility complex MHC

HLA of donor and recipients must match to decrease chances of rejection

Class I antigens HLA- A,B,C are responsible for organ rejection

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6
Q

Hyperacute rejection

A

Occurs immediately when circulation to graft is restored and organ turns white instead of pink

-uncommon due to tissue cross matching

-can occur due to blood transfusion with foreign HLA antibodies (immune system already primed)

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7
Q

Acute rejection

A

Occurs days to months after transplantation

Cell mediated immune response

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8
Q

Chronic rejection

A

Occurs months to years
Characterized by slow, weak cell mediated immune response

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9
Q

Steps of organ rejection

A

Once organ is transplanted the antigen presenting cells (macrophages) present the HLA antigen to both CD4 cells and CD8 cells —> T cell proliferation (TH1 and TH2)

TH1 —cytokines—> activates Cytotoxic T-cells —bind—> with IL2

Cytotoxic T-cells and IL2 create an allogenic cell lysis and further stimulates T-cell proliferation

TH2 —cytokines—>Stimulate B-cell immunity

B cells produce antibodies and bind with allogenic cells —> inflammatory cascade and complement system — > cell lysis

Antibody products cause graft cell cytotoxicity

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10
Q

Calcineurin Inhibitors

A

Cyclosporine and Tacrolimus

-prevents cytokine production by binding calcineurin —> prevent T cell activation
(Preventative of rejection)

No affect on active T cells

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11
Q

Purine Antagonist anti-metabolite

A

Azathioprine
Purines and pyrimidines —> building blocks of DNA and RNA
Purine antagonist prevent the growth of DNA and cell division of T cells
Blocks T-cell proliferation and cytotoxicity

(Can only prevent rejection)

Mycophenolate Mofetil
Inosine monophosphate (IMP) molecule used to make DNA and RNA
IMP is a precursor to guanosine
Mycophenolate inhibits enzyme inosine monophosphate dehydrogenase

(Can only prevent rejection)

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12
Q

Corticosteroids

A

Prednisone and methylprednisolone

Prevents…

RNA and DNA synthesis
Cytokines release
IL2 production and IL2 activation of T-cells
Cytokine induced B cell stimulation
Macrophage activity
Leukocyte chemotaxis
Complement system
Phospholipase A2 from making prostaglandins

This group of medications prevent the immune and inflammatory response

Used to treat rejection

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