Vaccines Flashcards

1
Q

types

A

DNA vaccines
Subunit
Inactivated
Attenuated

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2
Q

Examples of subunit vaccines

A

Hepatitis B
Tetanus
Diphtheria

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3
Q

What is a subunit vaccine

A

Vaccine containing purified components of the virus

Example components include the surface antigen

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4
Q

What is a DNA vaccine

A

(potentially in the future)
Usually a harmless virus which has a gene for a protective antigen spliced into it
This protective antigen is generated within the vaccine recipient and elicits an immune response

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5
Q

Advantages of DNA vaccine

A

Plasmids are easily manufactured and do not replicate
DNA is stable and sequencing may be changed
Temperature extreme are resisted, therefore it is easily transported and stored
Cheap

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6
Q

Disadvantages of DNA vaccine

A

Plasmids could integrate into the host genome

Immunological tolerance

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7
Q

Examples of inactivated vaccine

A
Polio (Salk)
Rabies
Hep A
Influenza
Preparations of wild type virus
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8
Q

Why is formalin added to inactivated vaccine

A

Chemical treatment with formalin causes virus to by nonpathogenic due to cross-linking of viral proteins

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9
Q

Advantages of inactivated vaccine

A

Sufficient humoral immunity if boosters given
Good for immunosuppressed patients
No mutations of virus
Good for those living in tropical areas

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10
Q

Disadvantages of inactivated vaccine

A
Some do not increase immunity
Boosters are required
Expensive
Potential failure of viral inactivation process
Little local immunity
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11
Q

What is an attenuated vaccine

A

Live virus particles grow in the vaccine recipient
However, these particles do not cause disease as the virus has been mutated to a form that is non-pathogenic e.g. the virus tropism has been altered

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12
Q

Examples of attenuated vaccine

A
Polio (Sabin)
Mumps
Measles
Rubella (MMR)
Varicella
Rotavirus
Yellow fever
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13
Q

Advantages of attenuated vaccine

A

Activates all phases of the immune system
It stimulates antibodies against multiple epitopes
Provides cheap and fast immunity
Has the potential to eliminate the wild type virus from the community
Easily transported

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14
Q

Disadvantages of attenuated vaccine

A

If the mutation fails then the virus will revert to its virulent form
Potential spread of the mutated viral form
Do NOT give to immuno-comprimised patients
Not good for those living in tropical areas

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