Immunodefisiency

20
Immunodefisiency & Autoimmune

Transcript of Immunodefisiency

Page 1: Immunodefisiency

Immunodefisiency & Autoimmune

Page 2: Immunodefisiency

Introduction

• Immunodeficiency disorders occur when the body's immune response is reduced or absent

• T or B cell lymphocytes (or both) do not work as well as they should, or when your body doesn't produce enough antibodies.

Page 3: Immunodefisiency

Classification

Primary secundary

Page 4: Immunodefisiency

Primary immunodeficiency (PID)

• Many of these disorders are hereditary and are autosomal recessive or X-linked.

• Gx: recurrent or persistent infectionOther signs include:– Poor response to treatment– Delayed or incomplete recovery from illness– Certain types of cancers (such as Kaposi's sarcoma or

non-Hodgkin's lymphoma)– Certain infections (including some forms of

pneumonia or recurrent fungal yeast infections)

Page 5: Immunodefisiency

Diagnosis

• full blood count (including accurate lymphocyte and granulocyte counts)

• immunoglobulin levels (the three most important types of antibodies: IgG, IgA and IgM).

• Complement levels

Page 6: Immunodefisiency

The International Union of Immunological Societies recognises eight classes of primary

immunodeficiencies

• Combined T- and B-cell immunodeficiencies• Antibody deficiencies• Well-defined syndromes• Immune dysregulation diseases• Phagocyte disorders• Innate immunity deficiencies• Autoinflammatory disorders• Complement deficiencies

Page 7: Immunodefisiency

Treatment of primary immunodeficiencies

• intravenous immunoglobulin (IVIG) or subcutaneous immunoglobulin (SCIG) in antibody deficiencies

• hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (for SCID and other severe immunodeficiences)

• Reduction of exposure to pathogens, and in many situations prophylactic antibiotics may be advised.

Page 8: Immunodefisiency

Acquired immunodeficiency "secondary" or "acquired" immunodeficiency

• Common causes for secondary immunodeficiency are malnutrition, aging and particular medications (e.g. chemotherapy, disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs, immunosuppressive drugs, after organ transplants, glucocorticoids).

• cancer, particularly those of the bone marrow and blood cells (leukemia, lymphoma, multiple myeloma), and certain chronic infections. Immunodeficiency is also the hallmark of acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS)

Page 9: Immunodefisiency
Page 10: Immunodefisiency
Page 11: Immunodefisiency

Autoimmune

Page 12: Immunodefisiency

Autoimmune DiseasesAutoimmune Diseases

• Loss of self-tolerance leads to production of antibodies or T cells that react against one’s own antigens.

• Immune system response to self antigens causes damage to organs.

• The major factors that contribute to the development of autoimmunity are genetic susceptibility and environmental triggers

Page 13: Immunodefisiency

Loss of Tolerance in Autoimmune Disease

Susceptibility genes (usually multiple)

Triggering factors (probably environmental)

Loss of tolerance

Auto reactive T cells Auto reactive B cells Inadequate regulatory mechanism

Persistent pathogenic auto antibodies

Persistent pathogenic immune complexes Persistent damaging auto reactive T cell

Page 14: Immunodefisiency

Classification

• Autoimmune diseases may be either systemic or organ specific

• Three types of autoimmune disorders:–Cytotoxic (Type II reactions)– Immune complex (Type III reactions)–Cell-mediated (Type IV reactions)

Page 15: Immunodefisiency
Page 16: Immunodefisiency
Page 17: Immunodefisiency

Type II antibody against cell-surface or matrix antigens ( syndrome, autoantigen

and consequence )

Page 18: Immunodefisiency

Type III immune complex disease ( syndrome, autoantigen and consequence)

Page 19: Immunodefisiency

Type IV cell-mediated disease (syndrome, autoantigen and

consequence)

Page 20: Immunodefisiency

Autoantibodies against cell-surface receptors