Anatomical and physiological characteristics of the hematopoietic system in children. Immune system...

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Anatomical and physiological characteristics of the hematopoietic system in children. Immune system in infants and toddlers. Luchyshyn N.Yu., MD, PhD

Transcript of Anatomical and physiological characteristics of the hematopoietic system in children. Immune system...

Page 1: Anatomical and physiological characteristics of the hematopoietic system in children. Immune system in infants and toddlers. Luchyshyn N.Yu., MD, PhD.

Anatomical and physiological characteristics of the

hematopoietic system in children.

Immune system in infants and toddlers.

Luchyshyn N.Yu., MD, PhD

Page 2: Anatomical and physiological characteristics of the hematopoietic system in children. Immune system in infants and toddlers. Luchyshyn N.Yu., MD, PhD.

Definition

The hematopoietic system consists of organs and tissues involved in the production of the cellular components of blood (bone marrow, liver, spleen, lymph nodes, tonsils and thymus).

Page 3: Anatomical and physiological characteristics of the hematopoietic system in children. Immune system in infants and toddlers. Luchyshyn N.Yu., MD, PhD.

Hematologic functions of Bone marrow

Bone marrow contains two types of stem cells:

hemopoietic (which can produce blood cells)

stromal (which can produce fat, cartilage and bone).

There are two types of bone marrow: red marrow (also known as myeloid tissue) yellow marrow.

The production of all types of blood cells

Page 4: Anatomical and physiological characteristics of the hematopoietic system in children. Immune system in infants and toddlers. Luchyshyn N.Yu., MD, PhD.

Hematologic functions of Liver

• synthesis plasma proteins including clotting factors and albumin

• clears damaged and non-functioning RBCs/erythrocytes from circulation

• Main hemopoetic organ in intrauterine period

Page 5: Anatomical and physiological characteristics of the hematopoietic system in children. Immune system in infants and toddlers. Luchyshyn N.Yu., MD, PhD.

Hematologic functions of Spleen

• Produces fetal RBCs• Removes old RBC’s

from circulation• Immune function

(Lymphocytes, monocytes)

• Storage function

(30% platelets stored in spleen)

Page 6: Anatomical and physiological characteristics of the hematopoietic system in children. Immune system in infants and toddlers. Luchyshyn N.Yu., MD, PhD.

Hematologic functions of lymph nodes, tonsils and thymus

• Play a role in the formation of new limphocytes

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• Blood is a highly specialized, fluid tissue.• Blood is internal environment of organism• Blood is traditionally classified as a specialized

form of connective tissue.

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Functions of Blood

Blood performs a number of functions dealing with:

Substance distribution

Regulation of blood levels of particular substances (Homeostatic)

Body protection

Page 9: Anatomical and physiological characteristics of the hematopoietic system in children. Immune system in infants and toddlers. Luchyshyn N.Yu., MD, PhD.

Blood Functions: Substance distribution

• Blood transports:– Oxygen from the lungs– Metabolic wastes from

cells to the lungs and kidneys for elimination

– Nutrients from the digestive tract

– Hormones from endocrine glands to target organs

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Blood Functions: Regulation

• Blood maintains:– Appropriate body temperature by absorbing

and distributing heat to other parts of the body– Normal pH in body tissues using buffer

systems– Adequate fluid volume in the circulatory

system

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Blood Functions: Protection

• Blood prevents infection by: – Synthesizing and utilizing antibodies– Activating complement proteins– Activating WBCs to defend the body against

foreign invaders

• Blood prevents blood loss by:– Activating plasma proteins and platelets – Initiating clot formation when a vessel is

broken

Page 12: Anatomical and physiological characteristics of the hematopoietic system in children. Immune system in infants and toddlers. Luchyshyn N.Yu., MD, PhD.

Blood Cells

Blood components

Erythrocytes (RBCs),

Leukocytes (WBCs),

Thrombocytes

(Platelets)

Protein,Carbohydrates,Fats,Amino Acids,Nonprotein

nitrogenous substances,

Hormones,Vitamins

Plasma

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PLASMA PROTEINS• ALBUMIN: 54%. Regulates osmotic

pressure in the vascular space,

acts as a buffer, carries stuff.

• GLOBULINS: 38%. ALPHA- Transports

hormones & bilirubin. BETA- Transports Iron &

Copper. Gamma- The antibodies.

• FIBRINOGEN: 7%. Clotting Factor I. Converts to Fibrin (clotting factor Ia).1-2%: Hormones, Enzymes, Complement, Carriers for Lipids.

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Sites of human haematopoesis

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Features of Physical Characteristics of Child’s Blood

• Absolute volume of blood:– 10 times lesser than in adults(0,5 liters & 5,0 liters

respectively)• Blood accounts for approximately 15% of baby body weight,

11% - infant, 7 % - adult

• Viscosity (thickness) is more than in adults

• Hematocrit in newborn is higher (55%) than in adults (40-45%). In infants it is 35% and the 15-year-olds reaching adults indicators.

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Scheme of hematopoesis

Page 17: Anatomical and physiological characteristics of the hematopoietic system in children. Immune system in infants and toddlers. Luchyshyn N.Yu., MD, PhD.

Erythrocyte (RBC)

• Biconcave disc• Anucleate, • no centrioles, • no organelles• Filled with hemoglobin (Hb) – 97% of cell contents• Lifespan of 120 days• Old RBCs removed from blood by

phagocytic cells in liver, spleen, & bone marrow• Most numerous of the formed elements

Page 18: Anatomical and physiological characteristics of the hematopoietic system in children. Immune system in infants and toddlers. Luchyshyn N.Yu., MD, PhD.

Production of Erythrocytes: Erythropoiesis

Erythropoiesis (blood cell formation) occurs in the red bone marrow (myeloid tissue)

Page 19: Anatomical and physiological characteristics of the hematopoietic system in children. Immune system in infants and toddlers. Luchyshyn N.Yu., MD, PhD.

Normal range of RBCs

Children – 4,5-5,5*1012/l

• Embryo – 5-6*1012/l

• Newborn – 5-7*1012/l

Page 20: Anatomical and physiological characteristics of the hematopoietic system in children. Immune system in infants and toddlers. Luchyshyn N.Yu., MD, PhD.

Control of ErythropoiesisHormonal controls

Erythropoietin (EPO)– Direct stimulus for

erythropoiesis – Released by the

kidneys in response to hypoxia

Dietary Requirements

Adequate supplies of – Proteins, lipids, and

carbohydrates– Iron, vitamin B12, and

folic acid

Too few RBCs

Too many RBCs

leads to tissue hypoxia

increases blood viscosity

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RBCs Abnormal morphology

Sickle Cells Acanthocytes

Shape changes Poikilocytosis

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RBCs Abnormal morphology

Tear Drop Cells Spherocytes

Poikilocytosis

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RBCs Abnormal morphology

macrocytes microcytes

AnisocytosisSize changes

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RBCs Abnormal morphology

schistocytosis megalocytes

Anisocytosis

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RBCs Abnormal morphology

hypochromia hyperchromia

AnisochromiaColor changes

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RBCs Abnormal morphology

Anisochromia

Polychromasia

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Hemoglobin

Hemoglobin is a protein in red blood cells that carries oxygen .

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Normal range of Hemoglobin

• Newborn – 180-220 g/l

• Children – 120-140 g/l

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RBC Antigens & Blood Typing

Antigens present on RBC surface specify blood type

http://learn.genetics.utah.edu/units/basics/blood/types.cfm

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Blood Groups and Compatibilities

Page 31: Anatomical and physiological characteristics of the hematopoietic system in children. Immune system in infants and toddlers. Luchyshyn N.Yu., MD, PhD.

Leukocyte(WBC)

• Has nucleus, mitochondria, & amoeboid ability

Agranular leukocytes are phagocytic &

produce antibodies

Granular leukocytes help detoxify foreign

substances & release heparin

Page 32: Anatomical and physiological characteristics of the hematopoietic system in children. Immune system in infants and toddlers. Luchyshyn N.Yu., MD, PhD.

Formation of Leukocytes

Page 33: Anatomical and physiological characteristics of the hematopoietic system in children. Immune system in infants and toddlers. Luchyshyn N.Yu., MD, PhD.

Normal range of Leukocytes

• Newborn – 10-30*109/l

• infant – 8-10*109/l

• Children – 4-9*109/l

Page 34: Anatomical and physiological characteristics of the hematopoietic system in children. Immune system in infants and toddlers. Luchyshyn N.Yu., MD, PhD.

Granular leukocytes

They make up about 50 to 70% of all white blood cells, play an important role in the immune system.

Page 35: Anatomical and physiological characteristics of the hematopoietic system in children. Immune system in infants and toddlers. Luchyshyn N.Yu., MD, PhD.

Agranular leukocytes

take charge of the overall cellular immune responses by releasing B, T and Th cells and regulating their functions

lymphocyte monocyte

Page 36: Anatomical and physiological characteristics of the hematopoietic system in children. Immune system in infants and toddlers. Luchyshyn N.Yu., MD, PhD.

Leukogram distribution of different white blood cell types

(after 5 year)

metamyelocytes < 1 % band neutrophils 1-2 % segmented neutrophils 55-65 %

basophils 0-1 %

eosinophils 2-4 %

monocytes 4-8 %

lymphocytes 23-35 %

Page 37: Anatomical and physiological characteristics of the hematopoietic system in children. Immune system in infants and toddlers. Luchyshyn N.Yu., MD, PhD.

Alteration of the ratio of different WBC:

Neutrophil

Eosinophil

Basophil

Lymphocyte

Monocytes

Neutrophilia

Eosinophilia

Basophilia

Lympocytosis

Monocytosis

Neutropenia

Eosinopenia

Basopenia

Lymphopenia

Monocytopenia

decrease increase

Page 38: Anatomical and physiological characteristics of the hematopoietic system in children. Immune system in infants and toddlers. Luchyshyn N.Yu., MD, PhD.

«Decussations» of the Leukogram

• On a 4-5th day life “first decussation” is observed, when an amount of neutrophilic granulocytes and lymphocytes is equal and averages 40-45 %.

• «Second decussation» comes in 4-5-years-old age, when the amount of neutrophilic granulocytes and lymphocytes is aligned and averages 40-45%.

lymphocytes

neutrophils%

5th year5th day

Page 39: Anatomical and physiological characteristics of the hematopoietic system in children. Immune system in infants and toddlers. Luchyshyn N.Yu., MD, PhD.

Trombocyte(Platelet)

• Small fragments of megakaryocytes

• Lifespan – 8-9 days

• Main function – participation in the process of blood coagulation

• Formation is regulated by thrombopoietin

• Blue-staining outer region, purple granules

Page 40: Anatomical and physiological characteristics of the hematopoietic system in children. Immune system in infants and toddlers. Luchyshyn N.Yu., MD, PhD.

Formation of Platelets

Platelets come from larger progenitor cells called megakaryocytes, and platelet production represents the final stage of megakaryocyte development

Page 41: Anatomical and physiological characteristics of the hematopoietic system in children. Immune system in infants and toddlers. Luchyshyn N.Yu., MD, PhD.

Normal range of Trombocytes

• Newborn – 150-400*109/l

• infant – 150-400*109/l

• Children – 150-400*109/l

Page 42: Anatomical and physiological characteristics of the hematopoietic system in children. Immune system in infants and toddlers. Luchyshyn N.Yu., MD, PhD.

Blood ClottingBlood clotting, or coagulation, is an important process

that prevents excessive bleeding when a blood vessel is injured.

Normal haemostatic system

vessel wallcirculating blood plateletsblood coagulation and fibrynolysis

Page 43: Anatomical and physiological characteristics of the hematopoietic system in children. Immune system in infants and toddlers. Luchyshyn N.Yu., MD, PhD.

Blood Clot

Fibrin thread

Platelet

RBC

Page 44: Anatomical and physiological characteristics of the hematopoietic system in children. Immune system in infants and toddlers. Luchyshyn N.Yu., MD, PhD.

Collecting complaints

Methods of clinical examination

• Bleeding• Infections• Enlarged lymph nodes= lymphoadenopathy • Pallor of skin and mucous membranes• Jaundice• Ostealgia = bone pain

typical

common

• Body temperature rises• Headache, dizziness• Fatigue, weakness• Night sweats• Poor appetite• Dyspnea after physical load

Page 45: Anatomical and physiological characteristics of the hematopoietic system in children. Immune system in infants and toddlers. Luchyshyn N.Yu., MD, PhD.

Methods of clinical examination

• When the patient got sick, • What the disease began with

first symptoms• Possible reasons of its

occurrence (in patient’s opinion).

• How the disease developed up to the moment of patient’s examination.

• Where the patient addressed for help

• Where he was examined and treated,

Anamnesis morbi

Page 46: Anatomical and physiological characteristics of the hematopoietic system in children. Immune system in infants and toddlers. Luchyshyn N.Yu., MD, PhD.

Methods of clinical examination

• Hereditary diseases• Obstetrical anamnesis• Parent’s health• Mother’s harmful habits• Pregnancy duration

Anamnesis of life

• Childbirth pathology• Life conditions• Irrational feeding • Presence of other

diseases (malnutrition, rickets, dysbacteriosis)

Page 47: Anatomical and physiological characteristics of the hematopoietic system in children. Immune system in infants and toddlers. Luchyshyn N.Yu., MD, PhD.

Methods of clinical examination

• Skin

• Eyes

• Mouth

• Lymph Nodes

Physical Examination

•Heart and Chest

•Abdomen

•Nervous System

•Musculoskeletal System

Page 48: Anatomical and physiological characteristics of the hematopoietic system in children. Immune system in infants and toddlers. Luchyshyn N.Yu., MD, PhD.

Physical exam of the skin- Inspection

1. Jaundice (hemolisis)

2. Florid (reddish) – polycythemia

Page 49: Anatomical and physiological characteristics of the hematopoietic system in children. Immune system in infants and toddlers. Luchyshyn N.Yu., MD, PhD.

3. Pallor – anemia

4. Petechiae – tiny red dots in the skin

Physical exam of the skin- Inspection

Page 50: Anatomical and physiological characteristics of the hematopoietic system in children. Immune system in infants and toddlers. Luchyshyn N.Yu., MD, PhD.

5. Purpura – large purplish blotches related to multiple hemorrhages into the skin.

6. Bruising

Physical exam of the skin- Inspection

Page 51: Anatomical and physiological characteristics of the hematopoietic system in children. Immune system in infants and toddlers. Luchyshyn N.Yu., MD, PhD.

6. Albinism (white).

7. Cianosis

Physical exam of the skin- Inspection

Page 52: Anatomical and physiological characteristics of the hematopoietic system in children. Immune system in infants and toddlers. Luchyshyn N.Yu., MD, PhD.

hematological

Physical exam of the skin- Palpation

• difference between hemorrhages and infection rash

hemorrhages

Page 53: Anatomical and physiological characteristics of the hematopoietic system in children. Immune system in infants and toddlers. Luchyshyn N.Yu., MD, PhD.

Physical exam of the Eyes - Inspection

Page 54: Anatomical and physiological characteristics of the hematopoietic system in children. Immune system in infants and toddlers. Luchyshyn N.Yu., MD, PhD.

Physical exam of the Mouth - Inspection

Page 55: Anatomical and physiological characteristics of the hematopoietic system in children. Immune system in infants and toddlers. Luchyshyn N.Yu., MD, PhD.

Physical exam of the Lymph Nodes - Inspection

Page 56: Anatomical and physiological characteristics of the hematopoietic system in children. Immune system in infants and toddlers. Luchyshyn N.Yu., MD, PhD.

Physical exam of the Lymph Nodes - Palpation

• Mobility • Conglomeration• Elastic or dense• Painfulness• Skin temperature in the

node’s place• Surface of the node’s place

hematological

• Mobile• Many groups• First elastic, later - dense• Painless• firm

(leukemia, lymphomas)

Page 57: Anatomical and physiological characteristics of the hematopoietic system in children. Immune system in infants and toddlers. Luchyshyn N.Yu., MD, PhD.

Physical exam of the Liver – Palpation, percussion

• Size • Surface of

the edge

hematologicalHepatomegaly(leukemia, hemorrhagic disorders)

Page 58: Anatomical and physiological characteristics of the hematopoietic system in children. Immune system in infants and toddlers. Luchyshyn N.Yu., MD, PhD.

Physical exam of the Spleen – Palpation, percussion

• Size

hematological Splenomegaly(leukemia, hemorrhagic disorders)

Page 59: Anatomical and physiological characteristics of the hematopoietic system in children. Immune system in infants and toddlers. Luchyshyn N.Yu., MD, PhD.

Hepatosplenomegaly

Page 60: Anatomical and physiological characteristics of the hematopoietic system in children. Immune system in infants and toddlers. Luchyshyn N.Yu., MD, PhD.

Physical exam of the bones- Percussion

• Bone pain and tenderness

hematological Osalgia (leukemia)

Page 61: Anatomical and physiological characteristics of the hematopoietic system in children. Immune system in infants and toddlers. Luchyshyn N.Yu., MD, PhD.

Physical exam of the joints - Inspection

Hemarthrosis (Hemophilia, Von Willebrand Disease)

hematological

Page 62: Anatomical and physiological characteristics of the hematopoietic system in children. Immune system in infants and toddlers. Luchyshyn N.Yu., MD, PhD.

Physical Exam of the CVS - Palpation, percussion, auscultation

• Dyspnea, • Tachycardia• Low blood

pressure

• Chest pain• Heart failure

(anemia)

Page 63: Anatomical and physiological characteristics of the hematopoietic system in children. Immune system in infants and toddlers. Luchyshyn N.Yu., MD, PhD.

Physical Exam of the GIT - Inspection Palpation, percussion

• Bleeding of the gums• Liver failure• Abdominal pain (hemorragic

disorders, leukemia)

Page 64: Anatomical and physiological characteristics of the hematopoietic system in children. Immune system in infants and toddlers. Luchyshyn N.Yu., MD, PhD.

• Hematuria• Menorrhagia (heavy

menstrual bleeding)• Frank vaginal

bleeding (dysfunctional uterine bleeding)

Physical Exam of the Genitourinary system- Inspection, palpation

(Hemophilia)

Page 65: Anatomical and physiological characteristics of the hematopoietic system in children. Immune system in infants and toddlers. Luchyshyn N.Yu., MD, PhD.

Additional methods of examination

1. RBC count, 2. Hb level, 3. colour index (CI, mean

corpuscular Hb concentration),

4. erythrocyte sedimentation rate (ESR),

5. WBC count, 6. Platelet count.7. Hematocrit.

Common blood count

Page 66: Anatomical and physiological characteristics of the hematopoietic system in children. Immune system in infants and toddlers. Luchyshyn N.Yu., MD, PhD.

Additional methods of examination

1.Prothrombin index (N: 70-100 %), 2.Thrombin time (N: 14-16 sec) 3.Concentration of fibrinogen in plasma (N: 2-4 g/l)5.Bleeding time (N: not more 360 sec) 6.Clotting time (Lee-White, Burker) (N: 6-10 min).7.Tourniquet test (capillary fragility) .8.Determination of specific coagulation factors deficiency (N: 0,6-1,5 each of them)

Coagulation tests

Page 67: Anatomical and physiological characteristics of the hematopoietic system in children. Immune system in infants and toddlers. Luchyshyn N.Yu., MD, PhD.

Additional methods of examination

1. Concentration serum iron (N: 7,7-33 mkmol/l) iron-binding capacity (TIBC). (N: 40-70 mkmol/l)

1. Serum bilirubin levels). (N: 8,5-20,5 mkmol/l)

Blood Type and cross match.

Biochemical blood test

Immunological blood test

1. Coombs test.

Page 68: Anatomical and physiological characteristics of the hematopoietic system in children. Immune system in infants and toddlers. Luchyshyn N.Yu., MD, PhD.

Additional methods of examination

Ultrasound investigation of spleen, liver, lymph nodes.

Biopsy of bone marrow.

Radiography.

Page 69: Anatomical and physiological characteristics of the hematopoietic system in children. Immune system in infants and toddlers. Luchyshyn N.Yu., MD, PhD.

Immune system

is a network of cells, tissues, and organs that work together to defend the body against attacks by “foreign” invaders.

Page 70: Anatomical and physiological characteristics of the hematopoietic system in children. Immune system in infants and toddlers. Luchyshyn N.Yu., MD, PhD.

Organs of immune system

Central• Thymus• Bone marrow• Bursa Fabricii

Peripheral• lymph nodes• Peyer's Patches

(of GI tract)• Tonsils• Adenoids• Spleen• MALT (Mucosal-

Associated Lymphoid Tissue)

Page 71: Anatomical and physiological characteristics of the hematopoietic system in children. Immune system in infants and toddlers. Luchyshyn N.Yu., MD, PhD.

Central organs of immune system - Thymus

• The thymus enlarges from about the 12th week of gestation until puberty, when it begins to shrink.

• Its function is to transform lymphocytes (white blood cells developed in the bone marrow)

into T-cells.

Central organs of immune system – bursa Fabricius

•Intrauterine lymphopoiesis

Central organs of immune system – Bone marrow

Page 72: Anatomical and physiological characteristics of the hematopoietic system in children. Immune system in infants and toddlers. Luchyshyn N.Yu., MD, PhD.

Peripheral organs of immune system – lymph nodes

Functions:

• Hemopoetic (lymphocytes formation)

• Immunopoetic (plasmocytes formation & antibodies synthesis)

• barrier-filtration (delay of foreign structures)

Page 73: Anatomical and physiological characteristics of the hematopoietic system in children. Immune system in infants and toddlers. Luchyshyn N.Yu., MD, PhD.

Peripheral organs of immune system – Spleen

Functions:

• Immunologic (creation T- & B-lymphocytes)

• maintaining of body's resistance (antibodies production)

• maintain homeostasis

Page 74: Anatomical and physiological characteristics of the hematopoietic system in children. Immune system in infants and toddlers. Luchyshyn N.Yu., MD, PhD.

Peripheral organs of immune system –

Waldeyer's ring• lingual, • two (palatine) tonsils • adenoids (nasopharyngeal tonsil), • lymphoid tissue on the posterior

pharyngeal wall

Payer’s patches•lymphoid follicles located in the wall of the small intestine

Page 75: Anatomical and physiological characteristics of the hematopoietic system in children. Immune system in infants and toddlers. Luchyshyn N.Yu., MD, PhD.

Types of immunity

Page 76: Anatomical and physiological characteristics of the hematopoietic system in children. Immune system in infants and toddlers. Luchyshyn N.Yu., MD, PhD.

Immunity: contrasts between innate and acquired

• System in place prior to exposure to antigen

• Lacks discrimination among antigens

• Can be increased after exposure to antigen through effects of cytokines

Innate (non-specific, natural, native)

Acquired (specific, adaptive)

• Induced by antigen

• increased by antigen

• Shows fine discrimination

Page 77: Anatomical and physiological characteristics of the hematopoietic system in children. Immune system in infants and toddlers. Luchyshyn N.Yu., MD, PhD.

The elements of the Innate immunity

• Skin = physical barrier• Mucus • Cilia• Lysosyme (in tears)• Acid (in stomach and urine)

• Phagocytes = scavenge up and engulf cell debris.• Granulocytes• Commensal bacteria (normal microflora)• Fever

Page 78: Anatomical and physiological characteristics of the hematopoietic system in children. Immune system in infants and toddlers. Luchyshyn N.Yu., MD, PhD.

Passive immunity

is protection by products produced by an animal or human, and transferred to another human

Active immunity

is protection that is produced by the person’s own immune system.

Specificimmunity

Types of Acquired (specific) immunity

Page 79: Anatomical and physiological characteristics of the hematopoietic system in children. Immune system in infants and toddlers. Luchyshyn N.Yu., MD, PhD.

The elements of the specific immunity

• T-lymphocytes are Cellular Immunity

• B-lymphocytes are the generators of Humoral Immunity

Page 80: Anatomical and physiological characteristics of the hematopoietic system in children. Immune system in infants and toddlers. Luchyshyn N.Yu., MD, PhD.

Features of Immune system in children• The deficient immunity of

newborns or "neonates" is a natural state at birth and is medically known as physiologic immunodeficiency in the neonate.

• The immune system actually requires several years before reaching a fully mature state in children.

• The maturation process of the immune system occurs in stages starting in the fetus prior to birth and reaching completion between 10 to 14 years of age.

Page 81: Anatomical and physiological characteristics of the hematopoietic system in children. Immune system in infants and toddlers. Luchyshyn N.Yu., MD, PhD.