Immunity (325E1) Flashcards

(42 cards)

1
Q

3 processes of inflammation

A

1) destroy invading and harmful agents
2) limit the spread of harmful agents
3) prepare damaged tissue for repair

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2
Q

when is inflammation a problem

A

when left unchecked

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3
Q

what are the 5 signs of localized inflammation

A

redness, swelling, heat, pain, loss of function

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4
Q

exogenous causes of inflammation

A

“we did something to our body” falls, burns, surgery, trauma

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5
Q

endogenous causes of inflammation

A

(lack of O2) tissue ischemia

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6
Q

acute inflammation

A

<2 weeks

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7
Q

chronic inflammation

A

> 2 weeks

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8
Q

what type of mechanism is inflammation

A

a protective mechanism that begins the healing process

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9
Q

events of inflammation

A

1) tissue injury or bacterial antigens (stimulates response)
2) vasodilation and increased vascular permeabiltiy
3) leukocyte recruitment & emigration (chemotaxis)
4) phagocytosis of antigens and debris

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10
Q

chemotaxis

A

process by which neutrophils are attracted to inflamed tissue

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11
Q

exudate: serous

A

watery, low protein, mild inflammation good kind

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12
Q

exudate: serosanguineous

A

pink tinged fluid, small amounts of RBC usually normal in post opt events

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13
Q

exudate: purulent (can be called fibrinous)

A

severe inflammation with bacterial infection, neutrophils, protein, and debris (abscesses may require draining) ** more concerning, thick & sticky**

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14
Q

exudate: hemorrhagic

A

lots of RBCs, most severe inflammation can be confused w/ bleeding, consider there might be bleeding else where and there is a problem

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15
Q

cytokines are responsible for what

A

systemic manifestations of inflammation

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16
Q

what are the signs of systemic inflammation

A

fever
-increased neutrophils (wbc)
-lethargy
-muscle catabolism
find source of infection

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17
Q

major histocompatibility complex (MHC)

A

-cluster of genes on chromosome 6 (aka human leukocyte antigen)
- makes protein for cell surfaces so they can identify themselves as self cells

18
Q

what does MHC tell us about

A

specific adaptive immunity

19
Q

specific adaptive immunity

A

is an effective & adaptive defense mechanism

20
Q

what does specific adaptive immunity do

A

-recognize invaders
-destroys invaders
-retains memory of the invader (the adaptive part)

21
Q

what cells are responsible for the memory immunity

A

B cells (humoral -> fluid) & T cells (cell mediated-> responses to cell surfaces), they are lymphocytes (wbc) they do not react to self tissue

22
Q

B cells: memory cells

A

cells that remember exposure to antigen (cancer, bacteria, infection)

23
Q

MHC proteins are used to

A

discriminate between self and non self

24
Q

B cells: plasma cells

A

cells that secrete antibodies (short lived, circulation in blood & bind to antigen that triggered their production)

25
humoral immunity is also called what
antibody immunity bc antibodies produced are found in the body's fluid
26
antibodies
created by our own cells and are also known as immunoglobulins
27
5 classes of antibodies
1) IgG 2) IgM 3) IgA 4) IgD 5) IgE
28
IgG
most common, 75-80%, protects against bacterial and viral infections **produced once an infection has been on going or resolved & can easily leave bloodstream and go into tissues**
29
examples of IgG antibodies
pervious infection or vaccine
30
IgM
10%, activates compliment for cytotoxic functions **for early, recent infections, 1st to be produced and signal**
31
IgA
secretory functions, protects against infections **found in saliva, tears, GI/GU & breastmilk**
32
IgD
trace amounts in serum, more on B cells, stimulates B cells to multiply and differentiate **& secrete other immunoglobulins
33
IgE
role in immunity against parasites and **allergic reactions**, signaling of mast cell degranulation
34
what are the two forms of adaptive immunity
passive and active immunity
35
passive immunity
-transfer of plasma containing antibodies from an immunized person to non immunized per - mother to fetus (IgG cross placenta, IgA in BM so vaccinated mom can pass that) -injection of antibodies **not a vaccine, like actual plasma w/ the antibodies**
36
active immunity
-protected state due to body's own immune response -active infections -vaccines
37
vaccines: traditional
inactive or killed organism
38
vaccines: attenuated
weakened organisms that are still considered live
39
vaccines: toxoids
inactive toxins that stimulate production of antitoxin (ex: tetanus)
40
vaccines: conjugate
protein or toxoid from one organism attached to a disease causing organism to stimulate response (ex: H influ type B)
41
who cannot receive a attenuated vaccine
people w/ weak immune systems (spec diseases: lung, heart, kidney or metabolic)
42
mRNA
takes a piece of the genetic code of a virus and teaches your antibodies to respond