Lecture 29 Flashcards

1
Q

What is the difference between vaccination and variolation?

A

Variolation involves giving a small dose of the actual virus

Vaccination is use of a related but less dangerous virus

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2
Q

What are the 5 types of Vaccines?

A
Whole live organism vaccine
Whole Killed organism vaccine
Components of organism
Polysaccharide Vaccines
Conjugate Vaccines
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3
Q

What are the features of whole live organism vaccines?

A

Establish an infection in vaccinated person
Immune responses clear infection in 1-2 weeks
There is prolonged exposure of the host to the microorganism
A single dose is usually effective at stimulating lifelong immunity

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4
Q

What are the features of whole killed organism/ components of organism vaccines?

A

Only briefly expose host to the antigens of organism
Immune response clears within a few days
typically three or more doses are required to stimulate good immunity
Often used in immunocompromised patients as it is a less dangerous vaccine

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5
Q

What is the problem with polysaccharide vaccines and how was this overcome?

A

There are only weak immune responses to polysaccharides with little immunological memory leading to the development of conjugate vaccines where the polysaccharide is attached to a carrier protein
This results in the conjugate being taken up by B cells with the protein being digested and presented allowing T cell conversion and good immunological memory

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6
Q

What are routine component vaccines given in NZ?

A

Dipatheria, tetanus, acellular pertussis, Haemophilus influenzae type B, Hepatits B
( D T aP HiB HepB)
These are given at 6 weeks, 3 months, 5 months, 15 months

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7
Q

What is the live vaccine routinely given to children in NZ?

A

MMR

Given at 15months, and 4 years

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8
Q

How effective are vaccines at preventing disease?

A

Most are extremely effective with efficacy often above 90%

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9
Q

What is Pertussis?

A

Childhood illness with paroxysms of coughing with whoop, apnoea and vomiting

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10
Q

What is herd immmunity?

A

The concept that if enough people are immunised then the disease will not be able to spread therefore proteting the few forr whom the vaccine did not work or who did not recieve the vaccine

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