Immunisation Flashcards

0
Q

How do antibodies protect?

A

Bind microbes
Prevent viruses entering host cells
Activate phagocytes
Activate complement

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1
Q

3 features of acquired immunity

A

Induced, requires time to develop fully
Specific
Remembers

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2
Q

Vaccination

A

Injecting a safe antigen that mimics the pathogenic ones & induces an adaptive response with immunological memory

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3
Q

What is passive immunisation?

Give examples

A

Administration of pre-formed antibody
Short lived, no memory

Transplacental IgG
IgA colostrum
Injection of Ig from blood donors

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4
Q

Active immunisation

A

Stimulates body to make own antibody

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5
Q

What is a toxoid?

A

An inactivated toxin

Used in immunisation

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6
Q

Named a killed vaccine

A

Cholera vaccine

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7
Q

What is pertussis?

A

Whooping cough

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8
Q

When will herd immunity fail?

A

If disease has another reservoir (eg animals)

If infecting agents undergo antigenic shift (eg influenza)

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9
Q

What is herd immunity?

A

If immunisation levels are high (>90%) a disease can no longer circulate in a population

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10
Q

When is Rubella serious?

A

If a pregnant women gets in, cross placental barrier, devastating effects! Now vaccinated against in boys AND girls. Herd immunity

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