Module 4: Types and Compositions of vaccines Flashcards

1
Q

What are live vaccines?

A

Live vaccines contain pathogens, usually viruses, which have been weakened so they can trigger an immune response but not cause diease.

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2
Q

What are inactivated vaccines?

A

Contain viruses that have been inactivated in some way, such as splitting, so they are unable to replicate or cause disease

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3
Q

What are some inactivated vaccines on the current NIS?

A

Influenza, Hep A, polio

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4
Q

What are sub-unit vaccines?

A

Contain microbial fragments or particles that can induce an immune response which protects against disease.

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5
Q

What are nucleic acid vaccines?

A

Use mRNA to carry genetic code to our dendritic cells make specific viral proteins that provoke an immune response.

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6
Q

What can a vaccine contain apart from the antigen?

A

Immune enhancers (adjuvant), preservatives (many vaccines in NZ do not contain these), stabilisers, surfectants, residual components from manufacturing

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7
Q

What is the most common adjuvant (immune enhancer) used for vaccines?

A

Aluminum salts.
(Bonus: breastmilk contains much more aluminum than vaccines; excreted in urine)

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8
Q

Are mercury-based preservatives used for NIS vaccines?

A

No
(Bonus: most NIS vaccines do not contain preservatives at all)

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9
Q

What are some stabilisers used in vaccines?

A

Sucrose, lactose, albumin, gelatin, glycine and monosodium glutamate (MSG)

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10
Q

What is a common surfectant used in vaccines?

A

Polysorbate 80. Keeps particales suspended in liquid, prevents clumping.
(Bonus: also in ice cream!)

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11
Q

What are some residuals that can be in vaccines?

A

Antibiotics, virus-inactivating agents, gelatin, ovalbumin (an egg protein)

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12
Q

What is a vaccine?

A

A biological preparation that provides active acquired immunity to a particular disease

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13
Q

What are five key characteristics of vaccines?

A

Safety, Immunogenicity, Efficacy, Long lasting, Stabiilty

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14
Q

How are the pathogens in live vaccines weakened?

A

They are forced to replicate repeatedly in tissue culture, known as passaging, resulting in less virulent (harmful) pathogen

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15
Q

What are currently the live vaccines on the NIS?

A

MMR, rotovirus, varicella, BCG

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16
Q

What are some of the sub-unit vaccines on the NIS?

A

Tdap, HepB, HIV, Hib, PCV, Zoster

17
Q

What are adjuvants?

A

Ingredient in vaccines that enhances the immune response by improving delivery
Not required in live vaccines

18
Q

What happens to vaccine ingredients?

A

The antigen is taken to the lymph nodes. All other ingredients are excreted via blood, kidneys, or metabolised.

19
Q

What are needed to manufacture vaccines for viral diseases?

A

A source of the virus and a suitable culture medium.
(NO human cells or tissue are present)