What does there need to be for a healthy immune response?
not too much immunity but enough to mount a response
What is a primary immunodeficiency?
What is secondary immunodeficiency?
An aspect of the host immune response is absent or deficient due to an external factor
What can cause secondary immunodeficiency?
How many primary immunodeficiencies are there?
over 150
What causes primary immunodeficiency?
A mutation in any one of a large number of genes that are involved in the development and function of immune cells.
What characterises primary immunodeficiency?
How are primary immunodeficiencies classified?
based on the underlying immunological defect
What is a main feature of the immune system?
It contains many different parts that cooperate and communicate to form a functioning system.
A deficiency in one part can have a knock on effect on other parts of the immune response
Primary Immunodeficiency classification: Antibody deficiencies
B cell problems or defects in T cells that affect the maturation of B cells
Primary Immunodeficiency classification: Combined immunodeficiencies
Primary Immunodeficiency classification: disorders of immune regulation
Primary Immunodeficiency classification: phagocytic cell disorders
Problems in the development and functions of granulocytes and macrophages
Primary Immunodeficiency classification: complement deficiencies
defects in functional and/or regulatory components of the complement
Consequences of primary immunodeficiency: antibody deficiency
pyogenic infections (encapsulated bacteria leading to puss formation)
Consequences of primary immunodeficiency: combined immunodeficiency
infection by bacteria, viruses and any opportunistic pathogen
Consequences of primary immunodeficiency: neutrophil deficiencies
bacterial and fungal infections
Consequences of primary immunodeficiency: macrophage deficiency
mycobacterial diseases
Consequences of primary immunodeficiency: TLR defects
Infections that are specific for the TLR affected
Consequences of primary immunodeficiency: complement deficiencies
Pyogenic infections and increased susceptibility to autoimmunity
What happens in B cell development?
What is congenital agammaglobulinemia?
What is the prototypic agammaglobulinemia?
X-linked agammaglobulinemia
What causes X-linked agammaglobulinemia?