Hypersensitivity And The Lung Flashcards

1
Q

What does the immune system (cellular response) comprise of?

A

Phagocytes e.g. monocytes and neutrophils phagocytose (envelop the invader) and some present to other cells

Lymphocytes: make and release antibodies and kill diseased cells

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2
Q

What does the immune system (humoral response) comprise of?

A

Immunoglobulins

Complement (form membrane attack complex)

Cytokines (allow communication between leukocytes and tissue cells)

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3
Q

What are antibodies?

A

Produced by B-lymphocytes (plasma cells)

Neutralises or eliminates pathogens

May also cause disease…

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4
Q

What does IgM do?

A

IgM: Circulating tetramers made at the beginning of infection.

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5
Q

What does IgG do?

A

IgG: Monomer highly specific antibodies targeting single epitopes.

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6
Q

What does IgE do?

A

IgE: Likely to have developed in response to parasitic threats. Implicated in allergy, particularly alongside eosinophils

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7
Q

What does IgA do?

A

IgA: Expressed in mucosal tissue. Forms dimers. Protects the neonatal gut (expressed in breast milk)

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8
Q

What does IgD do?

A

IgD: Monomers, induction of antibodies in B cells, activates basophils and mast cells

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9
Q

What is the Gell and Coombs Classification?

A

Recognition of foreign antigen can cause collateral tissue damage

Conceptualised in the early 1960s

Imperfect classification, but still holds as description of pathology

Does not hold well for complex immune reactions

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10
Q

What happens in Type 1 hypersensitivity?

A

Antigen interacts with IgE bound to mast cells or basophils

Degranulation of mediators lead to local effects

Histamine the predominant mediator

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11
Q

What happens when someone has an anaphylaxis shock due to peanuts?

A

Sudden onset

Systemic degranulation of mast cells and histamine release

Skin, eyes, lips swelling, hypotension

Bronchospasm can result in airway occlusion and death if not quickly and accurately managed.

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12
Q

What is the management to anaphylaxis shock due to peanuts?

A

Adrenaline 0.5mg (1:1000) or auto injector in community intramuscularly

Steroids

Antihistamines

Observation (second peak may occur circa 12 hours)

Tryptase measurements

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13
Q

What happens in Type 2 hypersensitivity?

A

Antibodies reacting with antigenic determinants on the host cell membrane

Usually IgG or IgM

Outcome depends on whether complement is activated and if metabolism of cell is affected

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14
Q

What is Anti Glomerular Basement Membrane Disease?

A

Rare but deadly type II HS disease

Goodpasture syndrome = alveolar involvement

GBM is made of type IV collagen present in alveoli and kidneys (glomeruli)

Alpha 3 subunit becomes antigenic

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15
Q

What is the diagnosis for Anti Glomerular Basement Membrane Disease?

A

Diagnosis requires high degree of clinical suspicion

GBM antibodies in serum or on biopsy (usually of kidney)

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16
Q

What is the treatment for Anti Glomerular Basement Membrane Disease?

A

Treatment with plasmapheresis (removal of plasma from patient to extract offending Abs)

Immune suppression (cyclophosphamide, steroids, rituximab)

Supportive treatment of lungs (ventilation) and kidneys (haemodialysis / filtration)

17
Q

What is Mycoplasma Pneumonia?

A

“Atypical” pneumonia

Cross reacting epitopes

Antibodies to M.Pneumonia also react to I antigen of red cells

Causes agglutination and haemolysis

Up to 50% of cases

18
Q

What is Type 3 hypersensitivity?

A

Antigen-immunoglobulin complexes are formed on exposure to the allergen

These are deposited in tissues and cause local activation of complement and neutrophil attraction

19
Q

What is Hypersensitivity pneumonitis?

A

Formerly “extrinsic allergic alveolitis” (EAA)

Immune complexes formed with a range of different antigens

Deposited in the acinar airways leading to inflammation acutely and scarring chronically

20
Q

What is the treatment for Hypersensitivity pneumonitis?

A

Treatment by removal of antigen +/- immunosuppression

21
Q

What is Type 4 hypersensitivity?

A

T-cell mediated, releasing IL2, IFᵧ and other cytokines

Requires primary sensitisation

Secondary reaction takes 2-3 days to develop

May result from normal immune reaction – if macrophages cannot destroy pathogen, they become giant cells and form granuloma

22
Q

What is the Mantoux / Tuberculin skin test?

A

Subcutaneous injection of tuberculosis protein

Interpreted at 48-72 hours

Diameter of induration determines positivity

Positive only if exposed to TB of vaccine previously

23
Q

What is Sarcoidosis?

A

Possibly reaction to mycobacteria
Multisystem disease causing granuloma
Eyes, skin, lungs, heart, nervous system…

80% regress spontaneously
Some require systemic treatment – steroids, methotrexate, others

24
Q

What are consequences of T-cell hypersensitivity?

A

Diabetes
Thyroid disease
Hepatitis
Nephritis
Myositis
Any –itis!

Life threatening pneumonitis
MUST STOP DRUG
Steroids may be helpful