BIOL 2420 Lecture Notes - Lecture 18: Abo Blood Group System, Type Iv Hypersensitivity, Memory T Cell

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This is referred to as an anaphylactic response. The 1st encounter with the allergen causes b cells to differentiate into plasma and memory cells: the plasma cells make ige then binds to mast cells or basophils, there are no apparent symptoms - no anaphylactic response. Ige molecules bind to the antigen and mast cell or basophile releasing histamine: histamine triggers vasodilation: redness, swelling, and decreased blood pressure - anaphylactic shock. Contraction of bronchiole muscles - difficulty breathing. Antihistamine: this blocks the action of histamine. Histamine is still produced but cannot trigger responses. Works well for mild symptoms - example - hay fever. Epinephrine: used to treat anaphylactic response. Systemic histamine release: acts as a vasoconstrictor increasing blood pressure, the effects last for 20-30 minutes, this buys time to allow for administration of intravenous antihistamine. Allergy shots: this is injected like a vaccine.

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