Autoimmune Disease Flashcards

1
Q

Cells involved in innate immunity

A
Macrophages
Dendritic cells
Mast cells
Neutrophils
Complement
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2
Q

Cells involved in adaptive immunity

A

T cells

B cells

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3
Q

Overview of innate immunity

A
Pattern recognition against broad classes of antigen
No memory
No amplification
Little regulation
Fast réponse (hours-days)
Short duration
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4
Q

Overview of adaptive immunity

A
Highly specific
Strong memory and amplification
Many regulatory mechanisms
Slow response (days to weeks for initial infection)
Responses may last months-years
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5
Q

Interactions between innate and adaptive immunity

A

Dendritic cells present antigens to T cells
T cells activate monocytes and macrophages
B cell antibodies activate complement

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6
Q

Phagocytic cells

A

Neutrophils: eat and destroy pathogens
Macrophages: also produce chemokine to attract other immune cells
Dendritic cells: also present antigen to adaptive immune system

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7
Q

Histamine producing cells

A
Mast cells, basophils, eosinophils: produce histamine and other chemokine and cytokines
Vasodilation
Immune cell attraction
Defence against parasites
Help wound healing
Also cause allergy and anaphylaxis
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8
Q

Complement

A

Directly attacks pathogens via alternative and lectin pathways
May be activated by adaptive immune system via antibodies

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9
Q

Cytokines

A

Signals between different immune cells

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10
Q

Chemokines

A

Attract other immune cells to sites of inflammation

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11
Q

Definition of autoimmunity

A

Adaptive immune system recognises and targets the body’s own molecules, cells and tissues

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12
Q

Main characteristics of autoimmunity

A

T cells that recognise self-antigens
B cells and plasma cells that make autoantibodies
Inflammation in target cells, tissues and and organs is secondary to actions of T cells, B cells and autoantibodies

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13
Q

Autoinflammation

A

Seemingly spontaneous attack so system inflammation
No demonstrable source of infection as precipitating cause
Absence of high-titre autoantibodies and antigen-specific auto reactive T cells
No evidence of auto-antigenic exposure
Caused by innate immunity

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14
Q

Autoimmunity

A

Theoretical concept rather than autoimmune disease which has distinct clinical entities
Some people have autoantibodies without any symptoms
Overlap with normal immune functions such as anti-tumour immunity

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15
Q

Failure of central tolerance

A

Mechanism of autoimmunity
T cell selection in the thymus
B cell selection in the bone marrow

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16
Q

Genetic predisposition

A
Mechanism of autoimmunity
Certain HLA (MHC) types select for certain self-antigens
Other genes that regulate immune functions
17
Q

Antigenic factors

A

Mechanism of autoimmunity
Infections that trigger autoimmune responses
Environmental triggers such as UV light and smoking
Alteration in self-proteins that increase their immunogenicity

18
Q

Triad of autoimmune disease

A

Genetic predisposition
Immune regulation
Environmental triggers

19
Q

Organ specific autoimmunity

A

Affect a single organ
Autoimmunity limited to autoantigens of that organ
Overlap with other organ specific diseases
Autoimmune thyroid disease is typical

20
Q

Systemic autoimmunity

A

Affect several organs simultaneously
Autoimmunity associated with auto antigens found in most cells of body
Overlap with other non-organ specific diseases
Connective tissue diseases are typical

21
Q

General clinical features of autoimmune disease

A
More than 100 different diseases
Can affect any organ of the body
Onset in middle age, old age
More common in the elderly and women
Leads to loss of organ function
Lifelong chronic conditions
Characteristic exacerbation and remission
Traditionally divided into organ specific or systemic
Common for diseases to overlap
22
Q

Hashimoto’s thyroiditis

A

Destruction of thyroid follicles by autoimmune process
Associated with autoantibodies to thyroglobulin and thyroid peroxidase
Leads to hypothyroidism

23
Q

Grave’s disease

A

Inappropriate stimulation of thyroid gland by anti-TSH-autoantibody
Leads to hyperthyroidism

24
Q

Myasthenia gravis

A

Autoantibodies block acetylcholine receptor
Causes problems with keeping eyes open, speaking, swallowing and smiling
Find that problems are worse as the day progresses

25
Q

Pernicious anaemia

A

Autoantibodies against intrinsic factor production

Reduces ability to absorb B12 resulting in anaemia

26
Q

SLE

A

Systemic Lupus Erythematosus
Systemic autoimmune disease
Typical symptoms are photosensitive malar rash, multiple mouth ulcers, arthralgia, alopecia
Autoantibodies form against many different molecules in the cell nucleus including ddDNA, dsDNA, ribosomes and histones

27
Q

Lupus nephritis

A

1) Immune complex deposition - antibodies against antigens in the nucleus combine with their targets to form immune complexes in the circulation which can deposit in any organ (typically kidneys) and cause inflammation
2) Inflammation
3) Leaky glomerulus
4) Loss of renal function
5) Scarring
6) Irreversible renal failure

28
Q

Examples of connective tissue disease

A
SLE
Scleroderma
Polymyositis
Sjogrens syndrome
Ubiquitous antigens cause multi system inflammation