Chapter 13: Immunodeficiency Flashcards

1
Q

How does Immunodeficiency occur? What are the two types of immunodeficiencies?

A
  • Occurs when one or more component of the immune system is impaired

Primary:
- Cause recurrent infections early in life
- 6 million people are affected world wide
Secondary (aquired):
- Result of disease, medical interventions(drugs), and nutritional deficiency

  • Recurrent infections by pyogenic, or pus forming, bact suggests a defect in antibody, compliment, or phagocyte function
  • Persistent fungal skin infection or recurrent viral infections suggest a defect in host defense mediated by specific functions of T lymphocytes
    • Global T cell dysfunction impairs both B cell responses and aspect of innate immunity, giving rise to broad defects in host defense
      (IMAGE 3,4,5)
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2
Q

What is SCID? What are the signs and symptoms?

A

Severe combined immune deficiency
- Group of genetic disorders
- Cannot make T cell dependent antibody responses nor cells mediated immune response. This results in NO IMMUNOLOGICAL MEMORY
- Diagnosed in early childhood

Signs and symptoms
- Infections that do not resolve after 2 months of treatment
- infections that require intravenous antibiotic treatment
- Persistent ear infections
- Persistent thrush in mouth or throat
- Repeated cases of pneumonia or bronchitis
- Repeated bouts of diarrhea

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3
Q

What is X-linked SCID and what are its features?

A
  • Most common SCID
  • Mutations in the gene IL2RG on the X chromosome
    • Encodes IL2 receptor common gamma chain Yc
    • Gamma chain is required for all IL2 Cytokine family receptors
      • IL2, IL4, IL7, IL9, IL15, IL21
    • T cells and NK cells fail to develop normally
      • Low T cells and NK count
    • B cells develop normally but without T cells they do not function normally
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4
Q

How common is X-linked SCID? What are the treatment options?

A
  • 1/50-60K births
  • Males overwhelmingly affected
  • Without treatment, infant dies within 2 years
  • Gene therapy and bone marrow transplant
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5
Q

What is XLA and what are possible treatments?

A
  • X linked agammaglobulinemia
  • 1/200K births
  • Mutation of BTK on the X chromosome disturbs BCR signal transduction
  • Fail to develop and mature B cells
    • B cell development is halted with Pro B stage
    • Very low levels of antibodies and low B cell count
  • Treatment is weekly infusion of antibodies
    (IMAGE 9 10)
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6
Q

What is Job syndrome?

A
  • Hyper-IgE syndrome
  • Mutation in STAT3
  • STAT3 is involved in broad spectrum of adaptive and innate immune functions such as Th17 differentiation and epithelial regeneration
  • Cold abscess abscess without heat, redness, fever, significant pain, or inflammation
    (IMAGE 11)
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7
Q

What is GATA2 deficiency and what treatment is availible?

A
  • Mutation of GATA2 gene
    • GATA 2 transcription factor is important for hematopoiesis
  • Affects varrious blood cells
    • Mainly affected cells are monocytes and dendritic cells
  • Most common initial symptom is infections with NTM and viral infections
    Treatment: Bone marrow transplant
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8
Q

What type of offspring would result if an affected parent had children with a unaffected mother? What are some features of GATA2 deficiency?

A
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9
Q

What is HIV?

A
  • Aquired autoimmune disease
  • HIV is a retrovirus that establishes a chronic infection that slowly progresses to AIDS
  • HIV infects and replicates within cells of immune system
    • Requires CD4 receptor and a chemokine coreceptor
  • Initial infection begins with R5 variants
    • Use CCR5 coreceptor
  • X4 variant emerges after initial infection
    • Uses CXCR4 coreceptor
    • Activated CD4 T cells are the major source of HIV replication
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10
Q

How does HIV bypass the epithelium and replicates?

A
  1. Enter via DC-SIGN binding on DC
  2. HIV internalized into early endosomes
  3. Transported to lymph nodes to transfer HIV to CD4 T cells
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11
Q

What is the immune response to HIV like?

A
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12
Q

What are the stages of HIV? What is the CD4 lymphocyte count for each stage?

A

Stage 1 - 500 or more leukocytes, 26% or more are CD4
Stage 2 - 400-299 leukocytes, 14-25% CD4 lymphocytes
Stage 3 - less than 200 leukocytes, CD4 is less than 14 percept categorized as AIDS

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13
Q

What is the graph that compares the time after onset of HIV infection and CD4 cell concentrations?

A
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14
Q

What is immune amnesia?

A
  • Immune system loses its ability to fight infections that a patient was previously immune to
    • Loss of memory lymphocytes
  • Measles virus infects B and T cells
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