BM1022 Lecture Notes - Lecture 10: Type Iv Hypersensitivity, Type Iii Hypersensitivity, Type Ii Hypersensitivity

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16 Jul 2018
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Understand the basic principles of the different types of hypersensitivities and give examples of diseases associated with these. Describe some of the clinical signs of and anaphylaxis. Situations where the immune system acts in a way that damages the body, fails to wor works less efficiently. An excessive or inappropriate activation of the immune response that has deleterious effects on the host. Type i only occurs in a proportion of exposed people. Types ii and iii occur in all exposed individuals. Type iv is mediated by t cells and their cytokines. Can be immediate (type i), subacute (types ii, iii) or delayed (type iv). Example: blood transfusion reactions, haemolytic disease of the newborn, transplant rejection, some autoimmune diseases (type 1 diabetes). Delayed hypersensitivity, mediated by t cells. work or ous. Allergen binds to ige antibodies that are bound to mast cells. tors. Effects seen: capillaries leak, mucus is produced, smooth muscle contracts.

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