What are the consequences of immune recognition?
* Incidental tissue damage
What are hypersensitive reactions?
Immune response that results in bystander damage to the self - usually an exaggeration of normal immune mechanisms
What diseases involve hypersensitivity?
Allergy and autoimmunity
What are classifications of hypersensitivity reactions?
What type of hypersensitivity reaction is involved in allergic disease?
Type 1 hypersensitivity reaction
What is type 1 immediate hypersensitivity?
Greatly enhanced sensitivity to normally innocuous substances, leading to physiological responses and tissue damage, resulting in the signs and symptoms of allergic reactions
What is an allergy?
IgE-mediated antibody response to external antigen (allergen)
What conditions are caused by allergies?
What are common allergens?
What are allergens?
Many allergens are soluble proteins and function as enzymes
Why is the prevalence of allergy increasing?
The “Hygiene Hypothesis” - Improved sanitation and decreased incidence of infectious disease results in increased predisposition to allergic conditions during childhood
Why is it beneficial for a child to grow up with older siblings, daycare centre, farming environment, helminth infections, microbial exposure, or pets?
Infections or viruses contracted from these factors enhance the maturation of the immune system, resulting in protection against asthma and allergy
What is the difference in immune response to an antigen between an isolated child in a sterile environment, and a child who has been exposed to many infections wth bacteria and viruses?
What is a TH1 immune response to an antigen?
No allergies - cell mediated protective immunity
What is a TH2 immune response to an antigen?
Allergies - antibody mediated immunity
What are the general clinical features of type I allergic disease?
What are specific clinical features of type I allergic disease?
What cells are involved in allergic disease?
Describe the process of an allergic response
When is a TH2 response useful?
Immune protection against parasitic worms (helminths) - not so good for abnormal reactions to allergens
What are mast cells?
Tissue-resident cells that produce vasoactive substances (histamine, tryptase, heparin, leukotrienes, prostaglandins, pro inflammatory cytokines like IL-4 and TNF-a)
What vasoactive substances are produced by mast cells?
How do mast cells orchestrate the inflammatory cascade?
What is the function of mast cells?
Important in defence against parasites and in wound healing