Principles of Chemistry I: Immune system – Flashcards

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question
Inside your body there is an
amazing protection mechanism
called the ______ ______. It is
designed to defend you against
millions of bacteria, microbes,
viruses, toxins and parasites that
would love to invade your body.
answer
Immune System
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The major components of the
immune system are (there are 8):
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Thymus, spleen, lymph system,
bone marrow, white blood cells,
antibodies, complement system,
hormones
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__________ hold up to 80% of all of
our immune function by some
sources
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Intestines
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In your chest, between your breast bone
and your heart, is responsible for
producing T-cells (see later) early in
our lives.
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Thymus
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The ______ filters the blood looking for
foreign cells (it also
looks for old red blood cells in need
of replacement to destroy and
recycle
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Spleen
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What is the main function of bone marrow?
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Produces new red and white blood cells.
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The marrow produces all blood cells from ____ _____.
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Stem Cells
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Precursors to different cell types:
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Stem Cells
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These blood cells are fully formed in the bone marrow, and enter the blood stream fully formed.
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Red Blood Cells
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These blood cells are produced in the bone marrow, but mature elsewhere.
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White Blood Cells
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Lymph is blood plasma. What is blood plasma?
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The liquid that makes up blood minus the red and white blood cells.
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Random bacteria that enter the body eventually end up in this fluid.
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Lymph
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The cells also produce proteins and waste products and the _____ absorbs these products and carries them away.
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Lymph
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One job of the _____ ______ is to drain and filter these fluids to detect and remove the bacteria.
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Lymph System
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How is lymph moved throughout the body? Hint: its not pumped.
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Lymph is not pumped through
the body like blood, but instead is “pushed”
through the lymph system as the vessels are
compressed by surrounding muscles
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Lymph eventually drains into the Left and Right __________ veins.
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Subclavian
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__________ are also referred to as immuno-globulins and gamma-globulins
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Antibodies
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Antibodies are produced by _____ _____ _____.
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White Blood Cells (specifically, the differentiated form of a B-cell known as a plasma cell)
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What shape, in general, are antibodies?
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Y-shaped
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They are Y-shaped proteins that each respond to a ________ _______ (bacteria, virus or toxin) and are ADAPTIVE.
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Specific Antigen
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When an antibody binds to a toxin, it is called a/an _________.
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Antitoxin
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When an antibody binds to a venom, it is called a/an _________.
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Antivenom
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The binding of an antibody to a toxin generally enables/disables the chemical action of the
toxin
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Disables
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When an antibody binds to the outer coat of a virus particle or the cell wall of a bacterium it can facilitate/stop their movement through cell walls.
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Stop
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A large number of antibodies can bind to an invader and signal to the __________ ______ that the invader needs to be removed.
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Compliment System
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What are the 5 classes of Antibodies?
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IgG, IgM, IgA, IgE, IgD
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Which classes of antibodies are monomers? There are 3.
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IgD, IgE, IgG
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Which class of antibody is a dimer? There is only one.
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IgA
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Which class of antibody is a pentamer? There is only one.
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IgM
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Which antibody is the most common in the body, making up roughly 70-75% of the antibodies?
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IgG
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Which antibody is typically found in bodily secretions, such as sweat, breast milk, and mucous of the respiratory and gastrointestinal systems?
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IgA
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This type of antibody causes the release of histamine in response to an allergy. It also protects against parasitic worms.
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IgE
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This antibody is the only one that crosses the placenta, and therefore, the only antibody that provides passive immunity to the fetus.
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IgG
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There are only a handful of proteins
in the __________ ______, which float freely in your blood, that
assist the antibodies in a less specific fashion
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Compliment System
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Complements are manufactured in the _____.
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Liver
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Compliment causes the ________ of cells.
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Bursting/Lysing
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There are several ________ generated by components of the immune system.
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Hormones
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Steroids and corticosteroids (components of
adrenaline) ________ the immune system.
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Suppress
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_______ is a hormone that
encourages lymphocyte production (a lymphocyte is a form of
white blood cell - see below).
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Thymosin
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Name 4 Surface barriers to microorganism attack:
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- Skin
– Mucus in nasal passages and lungs
– Lysozyme in the tears of eyes
– HCl (low pH) in the stomach
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What are the two different types of immunity?
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Innate and Adaptive
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A hypersensitivity reaction is also known as?
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Allergic Reaction
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Which antibody is most closely associated with hypersensitivity reactions?
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IgE
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Hyperseneitivity reactions can be severe: closing airways, blood pressure drops, and circulatory collapse occur as this type of shock sets in:
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anaphylactic shock
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Are hypersensitivities (allergies) permanent, or can it be lost eventually?
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In theory, people can overcome, or become desensitized to, allergies.
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What is immune incompetence?
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The immune system stops working
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Which type of disease is characterized by the immune system no longer recognizing its own cells and
starting to attack them?
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Autoimmune Disease
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Rheumatoid arthritis and Lupus are two of this type of disease:
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Autoimmune disease
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These stimulate antibody production, which can last for years.
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Vaccinations
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What are the 4 types of vaccinations?
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1. Live attenuated (weakened) virus or bacterial for virus protection
2. Inactive (killed) bacteria or virus
3. Toxiods (poisons) that kill bacteria
4. Component systems (part of a virus or bacteria)
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Why are diseases such as cholera and influenza not easily controlled by vaccinations?
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These types of diseases mutate easily. Vaccines typically only control one form of the disease, meaning that when the disease mutates, it can mutate into a form of the disease that is not controlled by the vaccine.
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