Immune Defense and Deficiency Flashcards

1
Q

Immunodeficiency causes increased incidence and severity of what three conditions?

A

1) Infection 2) Malignancy 3)Autoimmunity

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2
Q

What are some clues in a patient’s history that may indicate immunodeficiency?

A

Childhood infections; Family Hx; Behavior; Medications

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3
Q

What are six aspects of infections may indicate immunodeficiency?

A
  • More frequent - Respiratory (sinus, lung); PCP; Salmonella; VZV with HIV)
  • More severe - bacteremia; ¬ tissue injury
  • Prolonged - don’t resolve without therapy
  • Recurrent - diarrhea; pneumonia; otitis; sinusitis; HSV; thrush [oral Candida]
  • Poor response to Rx
  • Unusual (opportunistic) pathogens - PCP; aspergillus; CNS Toxo; Listeria; Nocardia, Cryptococcus; Cryptosporidium
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4
Q

What are four common sources of immunodeficiency?

A
  • Malnutrition
  • HIV/AIDS
  • Age (very young/very old)
  • Other (esp. medications – corticosteroids, chemotherapy, anti-TNF antibodies)
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5
Q

What are the four basic components of the immune system?

A

1) Anatomic (skin, mucosal barriers) 2) Phagocytes (neutrophils and macrophages) 3) Cellular immunity (CD4+ T cells, CD8+ T cells (CTL), Natural killer cells (NK)) 4) Humoral (Specific antibodies (B cells) - Complement)

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6
Q

What are the two broad ways in which the basic components of the immune system may become defective?

A

Decreased number/concentration Decreased function

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7
Q

What are the frequency, genetic malfunction, and typical presenting age for primary immunodeficiency?

A

Rates are low (1: 10,000 live births) Most are single gene defects Most are present in childhood (e.g., XLA; SCID; Wiskott-Aldrich)

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8
Q

What are the most common immunodeficiencies in adults?

A

* IgA deficiency * Common Variable Immunodeficiency (CVID) • IgG(2) subclass deficiency • Hyper-IgE syndrome (Job’s syndrome)

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9
Q

What are the most common causes of immunodeficiency in the developing world?

A

Developing country - Malnutrition - HIV-1/AIDS - Measles - Age

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10
Q

What are the most common causes of immunodeficiency in the developed world?

A

Developed country - Chronic steroids - HIV-1/AIDS - Cancer Therapy - Transplantation

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11
Q

What are the three most common conditions that compromise immune defense by the skin, and what infecting agents are typically found?

A

Severe Eczema, Burns, IV Lines S. aureus, Ps. aeruginosa

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12
Q

What are the two most common conditions that compromise immune defense in the lungs, and what infecting agents are typically found?

A

Cystic Fibrosis, Post-viral infection Ps. aeruginosa, S. pneumoniae, S. aureus

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13
Q

What is the most common condition that compromises immune defense in the oral/GI tract, and what infecting agents are typically found?

A

Chemotherapy E. Coli, Candida

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14
Q

What is the concentration of neutrophils that defines neutropenia?

A

For neutrophils, neutropenia with substantially increased risk of infection is classically defined as less than 500 PMN’s/uL, and particularly less than 100 PMN’s/uL.

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15
Q

Chemotherapy induced neutropenia commonly leads to infections in what three areas?

A
  • Intestine - GNR (E. coli), Candida; Enterococcus – Transcytosis (from epithelium); – Perirectal abscess
  • Periodontal - Anaerobic abscess; oral streptococci
  • Skin/Catheters - S. aureus (MRSA); Strept.; GNR (Ps. aer)
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16
Q

What is the disorder in Chronic Granulomatous Disease and what are the common infections and infectious agents that result?

A

• Sufficient phagocyte number but decreased function • Uncommon (1 in 125,000); young children • Defect in NADPH oxidase (oxygen radicals decreased) • Recurrent skin abscesses, severe prolonged pneumonia, bone • Staph. aureus*, Serratia*, Nocardia, Salmonella, Aspergillus* • Diagnose clinically, family history, NBT test of PMN (*Risk for catalase+ organisms that destroy own oxygen radicals; not Streptococci [catalase -])

17
Q

What are six common causes of deficiency in cell-mediated immunity?

A

• Malnutrition • Immunotherapy/Oral steroids • Immunotherapy • Chemotherapy • Transplantation • HIV/AIDS

18
Q

What types of infections result from cell-mediated immunodeficiency?

A

• Bacterial • Fungal • Viral • Protozoan • Helminths

19
Q

What are the T-cell concentrations for early, intermediate, and advanced AIDS?

A

Cells / µL HIV-1 Stage Above 500 “Early” 200 - 500 “Intermediate” Under 200 “Advanced”; AIDS

20
Q

What cells are affected by HIV and how are they affected?

A
  • T cell defects - - Low CD4+ T cells number - Decreased CD4+ T cell function
  • NK cell dysfunction
  • B cell dysfunction - Hypergammaglobulinemia/↑activation - Decreased memory B cells (IgD-; CD27+) - Decreased response to new antigens - High rates of autoimmunity
  • Phagocytic function - PMN and macrophages - OK (High rates of mucosal Candida but no candidemia)
21
Q

What is the most common humoral immunodeficiency?

A

IgA deficiency most common (≈1:700) 1:300-1:1,000 adults

22
Q

What are the associations and consequences of IgA deficiency?

A

Family history of IgA def. or CVID

Limited increase in infection - (except with IgG2 defiency) - protection by compensatory IgM

Increased autoimmune, ± malignancy

Transfusion reactions (with anti-IgA)

23
Q

What are the three complement deficiencies and what infections commonly occur with each?

A
  • C2 deficiency most common - C1-4 deficiency (classical pathway) present with pyogenic infections - C5-9 deficiency (terminal) show serious Neisserial infections
24
Q

How does Ig trigger destruction of antigens?

A

Pathogen-specific antibody typically binds by its pathogen-specific antigen-binding variable Fab region and mediates its effector functions through the ability of its constant Fc region to act as a bridge to other host defense mechanisms (e.g., complement, phagocytes, and NK cells).

25
Q

How do complement, phagocytes, and NK cells kill pathogens?

A

Recognition of Fc by these immune components (e.g., complement, phagocytes, and NK cells) induces fatal injuries to the pathogen, on which antibody defense is dependent. Complement: Complement-dependent assembly of transmembrane pores (membrane attack complexes [MAC; C5-9]), Natural Killer cells: Release of antimicrobial agents (e.g, cytokines such as IFN-γ) can activate phagocytes (neutrophils and macrophages), Phagocytes: Binding to and engulfment by phagocytes upon linkage of Complement (Green forks) with complement receptors (CR1/3) and Antibody Fc with Fc receptors on the pathogen and phagocyte, respectively.

26
Q

What is the most common serious primary defect in adults?

A

Common Variable Immunodeficiency

27
Q

What is the basic defect in CVID, the common infections, and age group most often affected?

A

• ↓IgG, IgM, IgA; nl number of B cells; “normal” T cells • Recurrent pyogenic sinopulmonary infections (esp. S. pneumoniae); less than ↓Ig children • Chronic diarrhea (G. lamblia; C. jejuni) - GI lymphoid hyperplasia; ↑ bacteremia • some ¬ PCP, fungi, mycobacteria; recurrent HSV • Increased risk of non-Hodgkins lymphoma and gastric cancers, and others. • Onset in teens or 20’s; men = women

28
Q

What are the four primary source of immune protection that may be defective in immunodeficiencies?

A

Anatomic Barrier

Phagocytic

Cellular

Humoral Immunity

29
Q

How do you test the cell number and function in phagocytic immunodeficiencies?

A

Test: - CBC and diff. (with smear)

Number: - PMN Less than 100-500

Function: Nitro Blue Tetrazolium

30
Q

How do you test the cell number and function in cellular immunodeficiencies?

A

Test:

  • CBC with diff - Flow cytometry

Number:

  • CD4 less than 500; Lymphocytes less than 1500

Function:

skin tests

31
Q

How do you test the cell number and function in humoral immunodeficiencies?

A

Test:

  • Total Protein/albumin - Serum Protein Electrophoresis (SPEP) - Quant. IgG, IgM, IgA - CH50

Number:

  • ↓globulin Total protein - ↓γ globulin SPEP - ↓ IgG, (M, A) Quant. - ↓CH50 CH50

Function:

  • anti-A/B (RBC) - vaccination