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Flashcards in Principles of immunisation Deck (32)
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1
Q

What are the 2 types of immunity?

A

Adaptive and innate

2
Q

What gives people active adaptive immunity?

A

Immunisation vaccines

Infection or exposure

3
Q

How do people get passive adaptive immunity?

A

Placental transfer of IgG
Colostral transfer of IgA

Antibody therapy
Immune cell administration

4
Q

What are the similarities and differences between active and passive immunity?

A

Both are specific (adaptive)

Passive does not give rise to memory cells ∴ the patient is not immune

5
Q

Serum sickness is a problem associated with passive immunity. What is it and what can it lead to?

A

Administered antibodies recognised as foreign by the recipient

Results in anaphylaxis

6
Q

If active immunity gives long term memory to an antigen, why is passive immunity still used in treatment?

A

Passive immunity has a much faster effect

7
Q

What is the MMRV vaccine against?

A

Measles
Mumps
Rubella
Varicella - chickenpox

8
Q

What are the 4 types of common vaccine?

A

LAV - live attenuated

Inactivated - killed antigen

Subunit - purified antigen

Toxoid - inactivated toxins

9
Q

Vaccinations against viruses are commonly what type of vaccine?

A

LAV

10
Q

In what situations would it not be suitable to give a patient a vaccine?

(Contradictions of vaccination)

A

Febrile illness (fuck knows what that is)

Pregnancy - cannot give LAV to a pregnant woman

Allergies

Immunocomprimised patients - susceptible to LAV

11
Q

What is antigenic drift?

A

Mechanism for alteration of the structure of the antigen of the pathogen

Co-infection of hosts (for example, human and avian) allows genetic re-assortments of different strains of a virus via POINT MUTATIONS

This creates a slightly different virus that has different antigens

∴ previous vaccine will not grant immunity to this new virus

12
Q

What does the cold chain network ensure?

A

Maintains quality of vaccines through their transport process, by ensuring the vaccines are transported in the correct temperature ranges

13
Q

Who are neonates?

A

Newborn infants

most vulnerable to infection at ages up to 18-24 months

14
Q

What is a subunit vaccine?

A

Presents the antigen

But does not introduce the actual viral particle

15
Q

Although subunit vaccines are generally very safe and easy to standardise, they are not very immunogenic.

What does this mean, and what must be given in the vaccine to help this?

A

They are not very good at triggering an immune response

Adjuvants are given with the vaccine - these are substances that enhance a body’s immune response to an antigen

16
Q

What is a potential problem with toxoid vaccines?

A

They only induce immunity to the toxin

Do not produce immunity to the organism that produced the toxin

17
Q

Give 2 examples of diseases vaccinated against with toxoid vaccinations.

A

Tetanus

Diptheria

18
Q

Give 2 examples of subunit vaccinations.

A

Hep B surface antigen (HBsAg)

Human papilloma virus (HPV) proteins

Acellular pertussis (aP) vaccine

Haemophilus influenzae type B (Hib)

Pneumococcal (PCV-7, PCV-10, PCV-13)

19
Q

Describe the attenuation mechanism

how LAV’s are made and why this makes them safe

A

Virus cultured in human cells

Transferred and grown in monkey cell culture

Virus acquires mutations that allow it to grow well in monkey cells

Virus no longer grows well in human cells (is attenuated) so can be used in vaccine

20
Q

Which vaccine type usually requires booster shots?

A

Killed whole organism / inactivated

21
Q

Which vaccine type usually requires refrigeration?

A

Live attenuated

22
Q

What is the difference between antigenic drift and antigen shift?

A

Drift = mutations causing changes in the presented antigens

Shift = recombination of different strains to make a new strain that presents antigens from the original strains

23
Q

What is a conjugate vaccine?

A

One in which a poor (usually carbohydrate) antigen is bonded to a stronger protein antigen

So it causes a greater immune response

24
Q

Conjugate vaccines are mainly used against what type of pathogen?

A

Bacteria

25
Q

What type of cancer is caused by human papilloma virus?

A

Cervical cancer

26
Q

What do checkpoint inhibitor antibodies do?

A

Block proteins on tumour cells or the receptors for them on T cells

Cancer would normally evade immune system attack by binding to the receptor

So the immune system attacks the tumour cells

27
Q

Immunotherapy basically aims to…

A

Improve or restore immune system function, so that it fights cancers in the body

28
Q

Give a examples of a Live attenuated vaccine (LAV) in clinical usage

A

Tuberculosis (BCG)

Oral polio vaccine (OPV)

Measles

Yellow fever

Rotavirus

29
Q

What diseases are vaccinated against using inactivated (killed) vaccines?

A

Whole cell pertussis - wP

Inactivated polio virus (IPV) - against polio

30
Q

Hypogammaglobulinaemia is a condition in which serum antibody levels become dangerously low

How is it treated?

A

primary or secondary
Infusion of γ-globulins to reduce infection

This is an example of artificial passive immunity

31
Q

Give an example of natural passive immunity?

A

Maternal transfer of immunoglobulins to a developing foetus

32
Q

Give 3 examples of natural sources of passive immunity

A

Snake/spider bites and scorpion/fish stings - antibodies specified against the toxin are administered

Infusion of γ-globulins to treat Hypogammaglobulinaemia

Prophylactic treatment of rabies - antibodies against the virus are injected post exposure