Immune Deficiency and Defense Flashcards

1
Q

Immunodeficiency results in the increased incidence of what three things?

A
  • Infections
  • Malignancy
  • Autoimmunity (because of decreased regulatory function)
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2
Q

What is a normal incidence of infectious disease in a healthy child?

A
  • Birth to age 10: 6-8 URIs per year

* First three years: less than 7 episodes of OM; 2 episodes of gastroenteritis per year

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3
Q

What are some clues to immunodeficiency?

A
  • Recurrent infections
  • Severe infections
  • Prolonged illnesses
  • Increased frequency of illness
  • Unusual pathogens
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4
Q

Describe the difference between public and private phenotypes.

A

Private phenotypes are immunodeficiencies that only predispose the person to a narrow range of disorders (DiGeorge), and public phenotypes are immunodeficiencies that predispose people to broad categories of disorders (e.g., SCID).

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5
Q

The most common cause of immunodeficiency worldwide is ______________.

A

malnutrition

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6
Q

Next to malnutrition, the top causes of immunodeficiency are _____________.

A

HIV, age, measles, and immunosuppressive medications

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7
Q

What can compromise the anatomic barriers that serve to protect the body from infection?

A
  • Skin: burns, eczema, IVs
  • Lung: CF, post viral illness
  • GI tract: chemotherapy
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8
Q

What bugs are most commonly implicated in pneumonia in young people, elderly people, those with AIDS, and hospital infections?

A
  • Young people: S. pneumoniae, C. pneumoniae, and M. pneumoniae
  • Elderly: H. influenzae, Influenza, and S. pneumoniae
  • AIDS: Pneumocystis jirovecii and S. pneumoniae
  • Nosocomial: Gram-negative rods and S. aureus
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9
Q

Which infections are more likely in those with antibody deficiency?

A

Encapsulated organisms, enterovirus, and Giardia lamblia

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10
Q

Why do those with multiple myeloma have immune deficiency?

A

The malignant plasma cells crowd out all other plasma cells. People with MM effectively have only one kind of antibody.

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11
Q

Which (pretty serious) immunodeficiency disorder can arise in adulthood?

A

Common-variable immune deficiency (CVID)

This presents with absence of immunoglobulin.

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12
Q

Normal CD4 counts are ______________.

A

500 –1,500

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13
Q

What do the subtypes of IgG recognize?

A

IgG1: protein (more prevalent)
IgG2: polysaccharide

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14
Q

Describe CVID.

A
  • Presents in adulthood (20s)
  • Symptoms include recurrent sinusitis, GI infection, or pneumonia
  • Decreased levels of IgG, IgM, and IgA with normal levels of B cells and T cells
  • Increased risk of malignancy (NHL and gastric cancers)
  • Splenomegaly
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15
Q

_______________ release antimicrobial agents when they bind the Fc receptor.

A

NK cells

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16
Q

Worldwide, how many new HIV infections occur each year?

A

2 million

17
Q

What organisms are those with CGD more susceptible to?

A
Catalase-positive organisms: 
•Staphylococcus aureus
•Pseudomonas aeruginosa
•Serratia
• Nocardia
•Aspergillus 
•Salmonella
18
Q

By CD4 count, what defines “advanced AIDS”?

A

Less than 200 cells /uL

19
Q

what is the prophylactic treatment for CGD?

A

TMP/SMX and anti fungals

20
Q

what is the most common type of immunodeficiency (broad)

A
cellular immunodeficiency (CD4+ cells, CD8+ cells, NK cells) 
usually secondary